2nd International Conference on Broadband Networks, 2005. 2005
DOI: 10.1109/icbn.2005.1589672
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Using location information for scheduling in 802.15.3 MAC

Abstract: In recent years, UWB has received much attention as a suitable Physical Layer (PHY) for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANS). UWB allows for low cost, low power, high bandwidth, short reach communication well suited for personal operating spaces. One of the key features offered by UWB is very accurate ranging between a transmitter/receiver pair. The IEEE 802.15.3 is a MAC protocol that has been proposed for WPANs. In this MAC, a combination of CSMA/CA and TDMA is used to achieve channel scheduling. The TDMA… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
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“…In the first group, we find works such as [6], [15]- [17]. The basic premise is that a link between transmitter with position x s and receiver with position x i can be scheduled with the same resource as an interfering transmitter with position x j , provided that…”
Section: The Medium Access Control Layermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the first group, we find works such as [6], [15]- [17]. The basic premise is that a link between transmitter with position x s and receiver with position x i can be scheduled with the same resource as an interfering transmitter with position x j , provided that…”
Section: The Medium Access Control Layermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In [15], location-based multicasting is considered, assuming a disk model, and is shown to both reduce the number of contention phases and increase the reliability of packet delivery, especially in dense networks. Time division with spatial reuse is considered in [17], which investigates location-aware joint scheduling and power control for IEEE 802.15.3, leading to lower latencies and higher throughput compared to a traditional round-robin type scheduling mechanism. Location information is also beneficial in reducing the overhead associated with node selection mechanisms (e.g., users, relays), by allowing base stations to make decisions based solely on the users' positions [6].…”
Section: The Medium Access Control Layermentioning
confidence: 99%