DocumentCode :
1408417
Title :
Shared time-division duplexing (STDD): impact of runlengths of dropped packets and fast-speech activity detection
Author :
Papadopoulos, Haralabos C. ; Sundberg, Carl Erik W
Author_Institution :
Res. Lab. of Electron., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume :
47
Issue :
3
fYear :
1998
fDate :
8/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
856
Lastpage :
870
Abstract :
Shared time-division duplexing (STDD) is a proposed high-quality low-delay multiple-access technique for microcellular systems. By sharing time slots in both directions of transmission, it provides a considerable increase in capacity over time-division systems with speech activity detection (SAD) with relatively few users per carrier frequency. We investigate the temporal robustness of time-division multiple access (TDMA) with TDD/SAD and STDD. We specifically consider the statistics of the runlength of dropped packets for each scheme and show that although STDD is superior to TDMA/TDD/SAD when both systems are operating at full capacity, both systems suffer from long periods of dropped packets. We introduce circular interleaving as a method of reducing the average runlength of dropped packets. Fast SAD (FSAD) is also considered. We obtain a novel model that describes (FSAD) speech for a pair of users by merging two existing models: one for (slow) SAD on-off speech for a pair of users and one describing FSAD speech of a single user. It is concluded based on this model that FSAD results in a considerable increase in the capacity over systems with slow SAD as well as in shorter average runlengths of dropped packets. A number of numerical results are included, especially for the short frame length of 2 ms. We note that FSAD yields a further capacity gain of about 20% beyond that of STDD with slow SAD
Keywords :
cellular radio; channel capacity; delays; packet radio networks; probability; signal detection; statistical analysis; time division multiple access; voice communication; FSAD speech; SAD on-off speech; TDD/SAD; TDMA; TDMA/TDD/SAD; carrier frequency; cellular radio; circular interleaving; dropped packet runlength; fast SAD; fast-speech activity detection; frame length; low-delay multiple-access; microcellular systems; probability; shared time-division duplexing; slow SAD; statistics; temporal robustness; time-division multiple access; Access protocols; Downlink; Frequency; Interleaved codes; Multiaccess communication; Robustness; Speech; Statistics; Telephony; Time division multiple access;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9545
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/25.704840
Filename :
704840
Link To Document :
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