WO2007075736A2 - Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise - Google Patents
Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2007075736A2 WO2007075736A2 PCT/US2006/048513 US2006048513W WO2007075736A2 WO 2007075736 A2 WO2007075736 A2 WO 2007075736A2 US 2006048513 W US2006048513 W US 2006048513W WO 2007075736 A2 WO2007075736 A2 WO 2007075736A2
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- noise ratio
- signal
- wireless terminal
- saturation level
- information
- Prior art date
Links
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/003—Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
- H04L5/0058—Allocation criteria
- H04L5/006—Quality of the received signal, e.g. BER, SNR, water filling
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W24/00—Supervisory, monitoring or testing arrangements
- H04W24/10—Scheduling measurement reports ; Arrangements for measurement reports
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B17/00—Monitoring; Testing
- H04B17/20—Monitoring; Testing of receivers
- H04B17/24—Monitoring; Testing of receivers with feedback of measurements to the transmitter
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B17/00—Monitoring; Testing
- H04B17/30—Monitoring; Testing of propagation channels
- H04B17/309—Measuring or estimating channel quality parameters
- H04B17/336—Signal-to-interference ratio [SIR] or carrier-to-interference ratio [CIR]
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
- H04L5/003—Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
- H04L5/0048—Allocation of pilot signals, i.e. of signals known to the receiver
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W48/00—Access restriction; Network selection; Access point selection
- H04W48/08—Access restriction or access information delivery, e.g. discovery data delivery
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L1/00—Arrangements for detecting or preventing errors in the information received
- H04L1/0001—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff
- H04L1/0023—Systems modifying transmission characteristics according to link quality, e.g. power backoff characterised by the signalling
- H04L1/0026—Transmission of channel quality indication
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L27/00—Modulated-carrier systems
- H04L27/26—Systems using multi-frequency codes
- H04L27/2601—Multicarrier modulation systems
- H04L27/2602—Signal structure
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W28/00—Network traffic management; Network resource management
- H04W28/02—Traffic management, e.g. flow control or congestion control
- H04W28/10—Flow control between communication endpoints
- H04W28/12—Flow control between communication endpoints using signalling between network elements
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W28/00—Network traffic management; Network resource management
- H04W28/16—Central resource management; Negotiation of resources or communication parameters, e.g. negotiating bandwidth or QoS [Quality of Service]
- H04W28/24—Negotiating SLA [Service Level Agreement]; Negotiating QoS [Quality of Service]
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/12—Wireless traffic scheduling
- H04W72/1221—Wireless traffic scheduling based on age of data to be sent
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/50—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
- H04W72/52—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on load
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/50—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
- H04W72/54—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on quality criteria
- H04W72/543—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on quality criteria based on requested quality, e.g. QoS
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W72/00—Local resource management
- H04W72/50—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources
- H04W72/56—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria
- H04W72/566—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria of the information or information source or recipient
- H04W72/569—Allocation or scheduling criteria for wireless resources based on priority criteria of the information or information source or recipient of the traffic information
Definitions
- the present invention relates to methods and apparatus of wireless signaling and, more particularly, to methods and apparatus for generating, transmitting, and/or using a report relating to and/or providing self noise information.
- base stations In cellular wireless systems, base stations often need to communicate user data/information to multiple wireless terminals simultaneously.
- the link from the base station (BS) to the wireless terminals (WTs) an important problem is the allocation of base station transmitter power to the different WTs being served simultaneously by the same BS.
- Each BS typically has a total transmit power budget available for all downlink communication, and this power is typically shared amongst the WTs.
- the base station transmitter power allocated to a WT in the cell will influence the WT' s received signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which in turn affects the downlink data rate that the wireless communications link from the base station to the WT can support.
- SNR received signal-to-noise ratio
- One wireless system where this power allocation problem arises is a multiple user orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) wireless communications system supporting concurrent transmission of different downlink user data to different wireless terminals sourced from the same base station transmitter.
- OFDM orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
- a base station needs to perform appropriate power allocation. For any assigned data rate option of a downlink traffic segment, the BS needs to correctly allocate enough transmitter power for that segment to be received reliably at the intended WT. If too little power is allocated, the decoding of the segment will likely fail and need re-transmission. If the power allocated for is excessive, it means that power was wasted and that wasted power could have been used for the other WTs being serviced by the base station.
- each data rate option that can be used for downlink traffic communication has a corresponding minimum received SNR requirement, and ideally the received SNR will scale linearly with the received power. Consequently, under ideal circumstances, the WT could measure the SNR at a single reference signal level, and then report that SNR back to the BS. Knowing that the SNR scales linearly with the power, assuming an ideal case, for any scheduled data rate option, the base station could adjust the transmit power relative to the reference signal to insure that the segment is received with the correct SNR for that data rate.
- the WT receiver processing introduces errors, such as channel estimation inaccuracies, phase jitter, and timing and frequency offsets. These errors typically scale with the received power, and effectively add a signal- dependent component to the noise. This noise component is sometimes called "self- noise,” to distinguish it from external and thermal noise that is independent of the signal processing.
- self- noise This noise component is sometimes called "self- noise,” to distinguish it from external and thermal noise that is independent of the signal processing.
- self- noise the received SNR no longer scales linearly with the received power.
- the SNR eventually saturates at a maximum level depending on the self-noise.
- the WT can no longer simply report the SNR at a single power level and expect the base station to be able to determine correct transmit power corresponding to different data rate options. From a single SNR measurement, the BS cannot separate the self-noise and external noise components, and therefore, cannot accurately extrapolate the power required to obtain any other SNR.
- the problem of self-noise is particularly important in recently developed wireless technologies which offer high downlink data rates. These systems offer rates at high SNRs (often in excess of 20 dB) where the self-noise component can be significant. Also, as these services are to be offered in mobile, fading environments, or in long range applications with significant delay spread, the self-noise component will become more pronounced. It is thus important that the BS can properly select its transmit power corresponding to different downlink traffic channel segments to account for self-noise.
- the present invention is directed to methods and apparatus to methods and apparatus for generating, transmitting, and/or using a report relating to and/or providing self noise information.
- One exemplary method of operating a wireless terminal in accordance with the invention includes determining a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level and transmitting, e.g., using OFDM signaling, the determined signal to noise ratio saturation level to a base station.
- a quantized value is transmitted to represent the determined signal to noise saturation level.
- the quantized value is transmitted using a dedicated control channel segment allocated to the wireless terminal but it may be transmitted in other ways instead.
- the dedicated control channel segment may be a segment reserved to convey a signal to noise ratio saturation level report during each iteration of a recurring predetermined uplink timing structure.
- the dedicated control channel segment may be a segment reserved for use by the wireless terminal, in which the wireless terminal selects to convey a signal to noise ratio saturation level report or another report, e.g., an uplink traffic channel request report.
- a signal to noise ratio level saturation level report conveys 4 information bits with the bit pattern being set to one of sixteen patterns, each corresponding to a different quantization level.
- the downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is a downlink signal to noise ratio that a wireless terminal would measure on a received signal that was transmitted by a base station at infinite power if the wireless terminal were capable of receiving and processing such a signal.
- the downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is a function of wireless terminal self-noise. In some exemplary embodiments, determining the downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is based on measured channel estimation errors. In the same or other embodiments, determining the downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is based on at least one receiver characteristic, e.g., receiver filter type, amplifier type, analog to digital converter sampling rate.
- the present invention is directed to, among other things, a method of operating a first communications device, e.g., a wireless terminal, including a receiver operating in the presence of self-noise.
- the method includes receiving first and second signals from a second communications device, e.g., a base station, said first and second signals having been transmitted at first and second power levels, said first and second power levels being different; performing a first noise measurement on the first received signal; performing a second noise measurement of the second received signal; and communicating noise measurement information corresponding to the first and second received signals to the second communications device.
- the communicated information provides information indicating how a SNR at the receiver varies as a function of the transmit power of the second device. This allows the second communications device to know or determine the self-noise saturation SNR level of the first communications device.
- Figure 1 is a drawing of an exemplary wireless communications system implemented in accordance with the present invention.
- Figure 2 is a drawing of an exemplary base station implemented in accordance with the present invention.
- Figure 3 is a drawing of an exemplary wireless terminal implemented in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an exemplary method of operating a wireless terminal, in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 5 is a flowchart of an exemplary method of operating a wireless terminal, in accordance with the present invention.
- Figure 6 is a table illustrating format, information bit mapping, and quantization levels for an exemplary report of saturation level of downlink self-noise SNR, in accordance with the present invention.
- Figure 7 is a drawing illustrating exemplary dedicated control channel segments in a repetitive frequency/timing structure which are allocated to a wireless terminal for use in communicating reports of saturation level of downlink self-noise SNR.
- Figure 8 is a drawing of an exemplary method of operating a communications device in accordance with the present invention. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
- FIG. 1 shows an exemplary communication system 100 implemented in accordance with the present invention including multiple cells: cell 1 102, cell M 104.
- Exemplary system 100 is, e.g., an exemplary OFDM spread spectrum wireless communications system such as a multiple access OFDM system.
- Each sector supports one or more carriers and/or downlink tones blocks. In some embodiments at least some of the sectors support three downlink tones blocks.
- each downlink tone block is associated with a corresponding uplink tone block.
- Cell 102 includes a first sector, sector 1 110, a second sector, sector 2 112, and a third sector, sector 3 114.
- cell M 104 includes a first sector, sector 1 122, a second sector, sector 2 124, and a third sector, sector 3 126.
- Cell 1 102 includes a base station (BS), base station 1 106, and a plurality of wireless terminals (WTs) in each sector 110, 112, 114.
- BS base station
- WTs wireless terminals
- Sector 1 110 includes WT(I) 136 and WT(N) 138 coupled to BS 106 via wireless links 140, 142, respectively;
- sector 2 112 includes WT(I') 144 and WT(N') 146 coupled to BS 106 via wireless links 148, 150, respectively;
- sector 3 114 includes WT(I") 152 and WT(N") 154 coupled to BS 106 via wireless links 156, 158, respectively.
- cell M 104 includes base station M 108, and a plurality of wireless terminals (WTs) in each sector 122, 124, 126.
- WTs wireless terminals
- Sector 1 122 includes WT(I 11 ") 168 and WT(N"") 170 coupled to BS M 108 via wireless links 180, 182, respectively;
- sector 2 124 includes WT(I" 1 ") 172 and WT(N” 1 ") 174 coupled to BS M 108 via wireless links 184, 186, respectively;
- sector 3
- WT(I" 11 ") 176 and WT(N ) 178 coupled to BS M 108 via wireless links
- System 100 also includes a network node 160 which is coupled to BSl 106 and BS M 108 via network links 162, 164, respectively.
- Network node 160 is also coupled to other network nodes, e.g., other base stations, AAA server nodes, intermediate nodes, routers, etc. and the Internet via network link 166.
- Network links 162, 164, 166 may be, e.g., fiber optic cables.
- Each wireless, e.g. WT 1 136 includes a transmitter as well as a receiver.
- At least some of the wireless terminals are mobile nodes which may move through system 100 and may communicate via wireless links with the base station in the cell in which the WT is currently located, e.g., using a base station sector attachment point.
- the wireless terminals, (WTs), e.g. WT(I) 136 may communicate with peer nodes, e.g., other WTs in system 100 or outside system 100 via a base station, e.g. BS 106, and/or network node 160.
- WTs, e.g., WT(I) 136 may be mobile communications devices such as cell phones, personal data assistants with wireless modems, etc.
- Each base station (106, 108) performs downlink signaling, in accordance with the invention, e.g., with each of its base station transmitters transmitting intentional null tones, downlink pilot tones, assignment information, and downlink traffic channel signals.
- Each base station (106, 108) receives and processes uplink signals in accordance with the present invention, e.g., including uplink dedicated control channel signals including downlink saturation level of self-noise signal to noise ratio reports.
- FIG 2 is a drawing of an exemplary base station 200, e.g., access node, implemented in accordance with the present invention and using methods of the present invention.
- Exemplary BS 200 may be any of the BSs (106, 108) of the exemplary system 100 of Figure 1.
- Exemplary base station 200 includes one or more base station sector receiver modules (sector 1 receiver module 202, ..., sector N receiver module 204) and one or more base station sector transmitter modules (sector 1 transmitter module 206, ..., sector N transmitter module 208).
- Each base station sector receiver module (202, 204) is coupled to a sector receive antenna (203, 205), respectively, via which the base station receives uplink signals from wireless terminals, e.g., wireless terminals connected to a base station sector attachment point.
- the uplink signals include dedicated control channel segment reports including downlink saturation level of self-noise SNR reports.
- Each base station sector transmitter module (206, 208) is coupled to a sector transmitter antenna (207, 209), respectively, via which the base station transmits downlink signals including intentional cell and sector null signals and pilot signals. In some embodiments, for a given sector, the same antenna is used for receiver and transmitter.
- Exemplary base station 200 also includes a processor 210, an I/O interface 212, and a memory 214.
- the various elements (202, 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, 214) are coupled together via a bus 216 over which the various elements may interchange data and information.
- I/O interface 212 couples the base station 200 to the Internet and/or other network nodes, e.g., other base stations, AAA server nodes, home agent nodes, routers, etc.
- Memory 214 includes routines 218 and data/information 220.
- the processor 210 e.g., a CPU, executes the routines 218 and uses the data/information 220 in memory 214 to control the operation of the base station and implement the methods of the present invention.
- Routines 218 include communications routines 222 and base station control routines 224.
- the communications routines 222 implement the various communications protocols used by the base station 200.
- Base station control routines 224 include one or more sets of base station sector modules (base station sector 1 modules 226, ..., base station sector N modules 228) corresponding to the sectors of the base station and an I/O interface control module 230.
- I/O interface control module 230 controls the operation of I/O interface 212, e.g., facilitating communications with other base stations in the wireless communications system via a backhaul network.
- Base station sector 1 modules 226 include a scheduler module 232, a receiver control module 234 and a transmitter control module 236.
- Scheduler module 232 performs scheduling of wireless terminals with respect to sector 1.
- Scheduler module 232 includes a dedicated control channel module 238 and a traffic channel module 240.
- Dedicated control channel module 238 assigns identification information, e.g., active user identifiers, to wireless terminals which are using a base station 200 sector 1 attachment point.
- Traffic channel module 240 schedules uplink and/or downlink traffic channel segment to wireless terminals using a base station 200 sector 1 attachment point, e.g., based on amounts of information to be communicated, requests, priority information, and/or reports received from the wireless terminals including downlink saturation level self-noise SNR reports.
- Receiver control module 234 controls the operation of sector 1 receiver module 202.
- Receiver control module 234 includes a dedicated control channel segment processing module 242, which processes received dedicated control channel segments extracting the various reports being communicated by the wireless terminals.
- DCCH segment processing module 242 includes a downlink saturation level self-noise report module 244 which recovers downlink saturation level self-noise report information from DCCH segments and associates the information with a particular wireless terminal.
- Transmitter control module 236 control the operation of sector 1 transmitter module 206.
- Transmitter control module 236 includes a null tone module 246, a pilot tone signaling module 248, an assignment signaling module 250, and a downlink traffic channel segment module 251.
- Null tone module 246 controls the sector 1 transmitter module 206 to intentionally refrain from transmitting on predetermined tones in the downlink timing structure at predetermined times within a recurring downlink timing structure being used by the base station sector 1 transmitter, e.g., thus facilitating WT interference measurements.
- Pilot tone signaling module 248 control the sector 1 transmitter module 206 to generate and transmit pilot tone signals on predetermined tones in the downlink timing structure at predetermined times within a recurring downlink timing structure being used by the base station sector 1 transmitter.
- a wireless terminal receiving the pilot tones and the intentional null tones can perform a measurement of downlink saturation level SNR.
- Assignment signaling module 250 controls the sector 1 transmitter module 206 to generate and transmit assignment signals to wireless terminals including, e.g., assignment of active user identifiers associated with DCCH segments, assignments of downlink traffic channel segments, and assignments of uplink traffic channel segments.
- Downlink traffic channel segment module 251 controls the sector 1 transmitter module 206 to control the generation and/or transmission of downlink traffic channel segment signals. In some embodiments, the downlink traffic channel segment module 251 adjusts the power level and/or data rate associated with a downlink traffic channel segment as a function of received downlink self-noise saturation level SNR information from the wireless terminal to which the downlink traffic segment signals are being communicated.
- Data/information 220 includes system data/information 252 and wireless terminal data/information 256.
- System data/information 252 includes one or more sets of sector information (sector 1 system data/information 258, ..., sector N system data/information 260) and dedicated control channel report information 262.
- Sector 1 system data/information 258 includes uplink timing structure information 264, uplink frequency structure information 266, downlink timing structure information 270, and downlink frequency structure information 272.
- DCCH report information 262 includes information corresponding to the various types of reports which may be communicated by a wireless terminal to BS 200 using dedicated control channel segments, encoding and modulation methods used, information bit allocation within DCCH segment to reports, reports' format, quantization levels associated with reports, and information bit interpretations associated with reports.
- DCCH report information 262 includes downlink saturation level self-noise SNR report information 274 which includes quantization and format information 276.
- an exemplary DLSSNR report conveys four information bits representing one of 16 possible quantized levels, and information 276 includes information associating each of the 16 possible bit patterns with a different value.
- Wireless terminal data/information 256 includes one or more sets of WT data information (sector 1 WT data/information 278, ..., sector N WT data/information 280).
- Sector 1 WT data/information 278 includes a plurality of sets of WT data/information (WT 1 data/information 282, ..., WT N data/information 284).
- WT 1 data/information 282 includes identification information 286, user data 288, downlink saturation level self-noise SNR report information 290, and assignment information 292.
- Identification information includes base station assigned identifiers, e.g., a base station assigned wireless terminal registered user identifier and a base station assigned wireless terminal active user identifier.
- the base station assigned active user identifier is associated with dedicated control channel uplink segments to be used by the wireless terminal to communicate reports including downlink self-noise saturation level SNR reports.
- Downlink saturation level self-noise SNR report information 290 includes a set of information bits corresponding to a received DLSSNR report and a corresponding communicated saturation level recovered by module 244 from the received report using information 274.
- Assignment information 292 includes assignment information corresponding to assigning identifiers to WT 1, e.g., an active user identifier, assignment information corresponding to assigning downlink traffic channel segments to WTl , and assignment information corresponding to assigning uplink traffic channel segments to WTl .
- User data 288, e.g., voice data, image data, text data, file data, includes information communicated as part of a communication session between WT 1 and another WT 5 and is communicated via uplink and/or downlink traffic channel segments allocated to WTl.
- FIG. 3 is a drawing of an exemplary wireless terminal 300, e.g., mobile node, implemented in accordance with the present invention and using methods of the present invention.
- Exemplary WT 300 may be any of the WTs (136, 138, 144, 146, 152, 154, 168, 170, 172, 174, 176, 178) of the exemplary system 100 of Figure 1.
- Exemplary wireless terminal 300 includes a receiver module 302, a transmission module 304, a processor 306, user I/O devices 308, and a memory 310 coupled together via a bus 312 over which the various elements may interchange data and information.
- the memory 310 includes routines 314 and data/information 316.
- the processor 306, e.g., a CPU executes the routines 314 and uses the data/information 316 in memory 310 to control the operation of the wireless terminal 300 and implement methods of the present invention.
- Receiver module 302 is coupled to receive antenna 303 via which the wireless terminal receives downlink signals from base stations.
- the received downlink signals include pilot tones signals, intentional null tone signals, assignment signals, control information signals, and downlink traffic channel signals.
- Receiver 302 includes a decoder 318 for decoding received signals which were encoded by a base station prior to transmission.
- Transmission module 304 is coupled to transmit antenna 305 via which the wireless terminal 300 transmits uplink signals to base stations.
- the transmitted uplink signals include dedicated control channel segment signals including DL self- noise SNR saturation level reports, uplink traffic channel segment signals, and uplink access signals.
- Transmission module 304 includes an OFDM transmitter 320 and an encoder 322.
- the transmitter 320 transmits OFDM symbols using a set of uplink tones.
- Encoder 322 encodes at least some of the information to be communicated via the uplink. In various embodiments, the same antenna is used for the receiver module 302 and transmission module 304.
- User I/O devices 308 e.g., microphone, speaker, keypad, keyboard, display, switches, camera, etc., allow a user to input and output user data, select functions, and perform operations, e.g., initiate a communications session.
- Routines 314 include a communications routine 324 and wireless terminal control routines 326.
- the wireless terminal control routines 326 include a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level determination module 328, a dedicated control channel segment module 340, and a transmission control module 342.
- Communications routine 324 implements the various protocols used by the wireless terminal 300.
- the wireless terminal control routines 326 control the operation of the wireless terminal 300 including control of the receiver module 302, control of the transmission module 304 and control of user I/O devices 308.
- Downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level determination module 328 includes a null tone measurement module 330, a pilot signal measurement module 332, a channel estimation measurement module 334, a downlink SNR saturation level calculation module 336, and a report generation module 338.
- Null tone measurement module 330 measures the received power of tones corresponding to intentional base station NULL output, in the timing/frequency downlink structure being used by the base station transmitter, to thereby determine an interference power N.
- the intentional NULL tones may correspond to cell NULL segments and/or sector NULL segments in an exemplary downlink timing and frequency structure being used by the base station sector transmitter.
- Pilot signal measurement module 332 measures the received power of pilot signals (GP 0 ) from the base station sector transmitter corresponding to a current connection, the pilot signals being having known modulation symbol values and being transmitted at known power levels, thus facilitating channel estimation.
- Channel estimation measurement module 334 measures channel estimation errors which are used in determining the signal to noise ratio saturation level.
- the channel estimation module 334 includes a pilot signal SNR module 346 which determines the signal to noise ratio of received pilot signals (SNRo).
- Report generation module 338 generates a downlink saturation level self-noise SNR report by comparing the calculated SNR saturation level from the output of module 336 to a plurality of quantized levels that can be represented by the 4 bits of the report and selecting the quantized level closest to the calculated level.
- DCCH segment module 340 maps a plurality of different control channel reports including DL saturation level self-noise SNR reports to dedicated control channel segments allocated to the wireless terminal in accordance with uplink timing and frequency structure information associated with the base station attachment point to which the uplink segment is directed. For example, some exemplary dedicated control channel segments dedicated to the wireless terminal, are reserved to communicate a 4 information bit DL saturation level self-noise SNR report, a 1 bit reserved report, and a 1 bit uplink request report.
- Transmission control module 342 controls, as a function of uplink timing structure information, when the transmission module 304 transmits the determined DL saturation level self-noise SNR report conveying the DL SNR saturation level determination information.
- the wireless terminal control routines 326 also include a report type selection module 344.
- the wireless terminal may select between a DL saturation level self-noise signal to noise ratio report and other types of reports such as, e.g., an uplink traffic request report.
- Data/information 316 includes user/device/session/resource information 348, system data/information 350, terminal identification information 352, timing information 354, base station identification information 356, data 358, measured received pilot signal power (GPo) 360, measured received NULL tone power 362, determined interference power (N) 364, determined SNR of received pilot signal (SNR 0 ) 366, calculated DL SNR saturation level 368, and downlink saturation level self-noise SNR report information 370.
- GPo measured received pilot signal power
- N determined interference power
- SNR 0 determined SNR of received pilot signal
- User/device/session/resource information 348 including information corresponding to communications sessions, e.g. peer node identification information, addressing information, routing information, authentication information, etc., information pertaining to air link resources allocated to WT 300, e.g., DCCH segments, uplink traffic channel segment, downlink traffic channel segments.
- User/device/session/resource information 348 also includes stored receiver characteristic information 349.
- the stored receiver characteristic information 349 includes receiver filter type information 372, amplifier type information 374, and analog to digital converter sampling rate information 376.
- Stored receiver characteristic information 349 also includes factory and/or field calibration parameters associated with the wireless receiver. At least some of the calibration parameters may be updated on an ongoing basis dynamically by the receiver, e.g., via self-calibration, e.g., to adjust for temperature, aging, power level, etc.
- System data/information 350 includes a plurality of sets of base station system data/information (BS 1 data/information 378, ..., BS M data/information 380).
- BS 1 data/information 378 includes uplink timing structure information 382, uplink frequency structure information 384, downlink timing structure information 386, and downlink frequency structure information 388.
- System data/information 350 also includes dedicated control channel report information 382 which includes DL saturation level self-noise SNR report information 384 including quantization level information/format information 386.
- Terminal identification information 352 includes a base station assigned wireless terminal active user identifier which associates the wireless terminal with a set of dedicated control channel segments within an uplink timing and frequency structure being used by the base station, to be used by the wireless terminal to communicate uplink signals including DL saturation level self-noise SNR reports.
- Timing information 354 includes the current timing of the wireless terminal with respect to repetitive downlink and uplink timing structures being used by the base station to which 13
- Data 358 includes user data, e.g., voice, audio, image, text, and/or file data/information pertaining to a communications session, received via downlink traffic channel segments and/or to be transmitted via uplink traffic channel segments assigned to the wireless terminal.
- Measured received pilot signal power (GPo) 360 is an output of pilot signal measurement module 332.
- Measured received null power 362 and determined interference power (N) 364 are outputs of null measurement module 330.
- Determined SNR of received pilot signal (SNR 0 ) 366 is an output of pilot signal SNR module 346.
- Calculated DL SNR saturation level 368 is an output of calculation module 336.
- Downlink saturation level of self-noise SNR report information 370 includes information which is output from report generation module 338 and represents a quantized version of calculated information 368.
- FIG. 4 is a drawing of a flowchart 400 of an exemplary method of operating a wireless terminal in accordance with the present invention. Operation starts in step 402, where the wireless terminal is powered on and initialized. In some embodiments, in step 402, the wireless terminal establishes a connection with a base station attachment point and is assigned an identifier associated with dedicated control channel segments in an uplink timing and frequency structure. Operation proceeds from step 402 to step 404.
- the wireless terminal is operated to determine a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level.
- the downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is a downlink signal to noise ratio that the wireless terminal would measure on a received signal that was transmitted by a base station at infinite power.
- the signal to noise ratio saturation level is a function of wireless terminal self-noise.
- the step of determining a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is based on measured channel estimation errors.
- the step of determining a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is based on at least one receiver characteristic of a receiver module included in the wireless terminal. For example, the at least one 2006/048513
- receiver characteristic is one of: receiver filter type, amplifier type, and analog digital converter sampling rate.
- Step 404 includes sub-steps 408, 410, 412, and 414.
- the wireless terminal is operated to measure the received power of a tone corresponding to a null base station output to thereby determine an interference power N.
- the tone corresponding to the null base station output in some embodiments, corresponds to one of a downlink cell null tone segment and a downlink sector null tone segment.
- the received power on multiple null tones is considered in determining the interference power N.
- the wireless terminal is operated to measure the received power of a pilot signal, GPo- Operation proceeds from sub-step 410 to sub-step 412.
- step 406 the wireless terminal is operated to transmit said determined signal to noise ratio saturation level to a base station.
- the transmission of step 406 may be as a quantized value that is transmitted using OFDM signals using a predetermined uplink transmission unit dedicated for the transmission of downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level information in a predetermined uplink timing structure.
- the predetermined uplink transmission unit is a dedicated control channel segment, as part of an uplink dedicated control channel dedicated to the wireless terminal.
- An exemplary dedicated control channel segment includes 21 OFDM tone-symbols, each tone-symbol used for conveying a modulation symbol value, e.g., a QPSK modulation symbol value.
- the transmitting step 406 transmits a report in the form of one of a plurality of predetermined report values.
- the predetermined report values are 4 bit values, each value corresponding to a different quantization level.
- the 4 information bits of the report convey one of 16 different levels ranging from 8.75dBs to 29.75dBs.
- step 406 Operation proceeds from step 406 to step 404 such that the steps of determining a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level and transmitting the determined signal to noise ratio saturation level are repeated.
- the wireless terminal continues repeating steps 404 and step 406 while the wireless terminal continues to be allocated a set of dedicated control channel segments, e.g., as an active user.
- the wireless terminal prior to said transmitting step 406, is operated to determine as to whether said determined downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level is to be transmitted in an uplink transmission segment in which said wireless terminal can select to transmit said downlink signal to noise ratio saturation level or other information.
- the wireless terminal has, within a recurring uplink dedicated control channel structure, some segments which are predetermined to be used by the wireless terminal to transmit a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation report and some segments which the wireless terminal may select to transmit a downlink signal to noise ratio saturation report from among a plurality of different types of reports which may be communicated in that segment.
- FIG. 5 is a drawing of a flowchart 500 of an exemplary method of operating a wireless terminal in accordance with the present invention. Operation starts in step 502 where the wireless terminal is powered on and initialized. Operation proceeds from step 502 to steps 504, 506, and 508.
- the wireless terminal measures the received power of a downlink null channel (DL.NCH) and determines an interference power (N).
- DL.NCH downlink null channel
- N interference power
- the Null channel corresponds to predetermined tone-symbols in an exemplary downlink timing and frequency structure used by the base station serving as the current attachment point for the wireless terminal in which the base station intentionally does not transmit using those tone-symbols; therefore, received power on the NULL channel measured by the wireless terminal receiver represents interference.
- step 506 the wireless terminal measures the received power (G*P 0 ) of a downlink pilot channel (DL.PICH).
- step 508 the wireless terminal measures the signal to noise ratio (SNR 0 ) of the downlink pilot channel (DL.PICH). Operation proceeds from steps 504, 506, and 508 to step 510.
- step 512 the wireless terminal selects the closet value from a predetermined table of quantized level of saturation level of downlink SNR to represent the calculated saturation level in a dedicated control channel report, and the wireless terminal generates the report. Operation proceeds from step 512 to step 514.
- the wireless terminal transmits the generated report to the base station, said generated report being communicated using a dedicated control channel segment allocated to the wireless terminal, e.g., using a predetermined portion of a predetermined indexed dedicated control channel segment.
- a dedicated control channel segment allocated to the wireless terminal e.g., using a predetermined portion of a predetermined indexed dedicated control channel segment.
- the exemplary WT maybe in a full-tone format mode of DCCH operation using the repetitive reporting structure and the report may be a four information bit DLSSNR report, e.g., DLSSNR4, of a DCCH segment included as part of one of the indexed DCCH segments in the repetitive reporting structure.
- DLSSNR4 downlink self-noise SNR report
- the WT derives the saturation level of the DL SNR, which is defined to be the DL SNR that the WT receiver would measure on a received signal if the base station sector (BSS) transmitted the signal at infinite power.
- the saturation level can be, and in some embodiments is, determined by the self-noise of the WT receiver, which may be caused by factors such as channel estimation errors.
- the following is an exemplary method to derive the saturation level of the DL SNR.
- DL.NCH downlink Null channel
- Table 600 of Figure 6 is such an exemplary table describing the format of DLSSNR4.
- First column 602 indicates the 16 different possible bit patterns that can be conveyed by the DLSSNR4 report, and second column 604 lists saturation levels of DL SNR that are communicated corresponding to each bit pattern ranging from 8.75dB to 29.75 dBs.
- FIG. 7 is a drawing 700 illustrating exemplary dedicated control channel segments in an exemplary frequency/timing structure allocated to a wireless terminal associated with a dedicated control channel logical tone used to convey a report of the saturation level of downlink self-noise SNR.
- Vertical axis 702 represents uplink logical tones in an exemplary uplink frequency structure being used by a base station sector attachment point.
- an exemplary uplink tone block corresponding to the attachment point may use 113 contiguous tones and a subset of those, e.g., the 31 tones indexed 81 .. I l l may be used for dedicated control channel segments.
- logical tone 81 has been allocated to a wireless terminal using the base station sector attachment point.
- Horizontal axis 704 represents DCCH segment index in a repetitive structure of 40 indexed segments (0.. 39).
- An exemplary DCCH segment in some embodiments comprises one logical tone for the duration of 21 OFDM symbol transmission time periods corresponding to 21 OFDM tone-symbols.
- Legend 706 indicates that DCCH segments represented by full shading 708 are used to convey a four bit downlink self-noise saturation level SNR report (DLSSNR4) and additional report(s).
- the exemplary segment conveys 6 information bits and 4 of those 6 information bits represent the DLSSNR4 report.
- DCCH segments represented by cross-hatch shading 710 are segments in which the WT may select to convey a four bit downlink saturation level of self-noise SNR report (DLSSNR4) and additional report(s).
- DLSSNR4 downlink saturation level of self-noise SNR report
- the exemplary WT has been allocated logical uplink tone 81 and transmits DCCH signals using 40 DCCH segments in a repetitive structure.
- indexed segment 36 is to be used to convey the DLSSNR4 report.
- indexed segments 1, 11, and 21 may be used to convey the DLSSNR4 report at the discretion of the WT.
- FIG 8 is a drawing of a flowchart 800 of an exemplary method of operating a first communications device in accordance with the present invention, said first communications device operating in the presence of self-noise.
- the first communications device is a wireless terminal such as a mobile node.
- the first communications device is a man portable communications device.
- the first communications device is a handheld communications device which supports data communications sessions.
- the first communications device is a communications device which supports voice communications between the first communications device and a second communications device.
- the exemplary method starts in step 802 and proceeds to step 804.
- the first communications device receives first and second signals from a second communications device, said first and second signals having been transmitted at first and second power levels, said first and second power levels being different.
- the second communications device is a base station.
- the step of receiving first and second signals includes receiving said first and second signals over an airlink.
- the second signal was transmitted as a NULL signal.
- the first signal is a pilot signal.
- the first signal corresponds to at least one tone of an OFDM symbol.
- the first and second signals each include at least one tone within the same OFDM symbol.
- an exemplary OFDM symbol in some embodiments, includes 113 tones, and some of the OFDM symbols include one or more non-zero pilot tone symbol and one or more intentional NULL tones.
- the first and second signals are signals which are transmitted at predetermined power levels and wherein at least one of said first and second signals are signals which were transmitted at predetermined phase.
- the first signal is in some embodiments, a pilot signal transmitted at a non-zero predetermined power level with respect to a base station, reference power level and transmitted at a predetermined phase
- the second signal is an intentional NULL signal transmitted at zero power level.
- the first signal is transmitted at a first non- power level and the second signal is transmitted at a second non-zero power level.
- the first signal is a first pilot signal transmitted at a first non-zero power level and the second signal is a second pilot signal transmitted at a second non-zero power level.
- the first signal is a first pilot signal transmitted at a first non-zero power level and the second signal is a different broadcast signal transmitted at a second non-zero power level, e.g., a beacon signal, an assignment signal, an identification signal, etc.
- the first signal is a broadcast signal communicated at a predetermined power level, e.g., a timing and synchronization broadcast signal
- the second signal is an intentional Null signal.
- the broadcast signal and intentional Null signal are communicated each using at least some tones of the same OFDM symbol. Operation proceeds from step 804 to step 806.
- the first communications device performs a first noise measurement on the first received signal
- the first communications device performs a second noise measurement on the second received signal
- the first noise measurement is a measured signal to noise ratio of the first received signal.
- the second measurement may, but need not be in all embodiments, a type of measurement which is the same as or similar to the first measurement.
- the second noise measurement is a measured signal to noise ratio of the second received signal.
- the first noise measurement provides power information about the first received signal, said first received signal having been transmitted at a predetermined non-zero power level and phase and noise having been subsequently introduced into the first signal.
- the second noise measurement provides power information of the second received signal, said second received signal having been transmitted at a zero power level and noise having been subsequently introduced into the second signal.
- operation proceeds from step 808 to step 810, while in other embodiments, operation proceeds from step 808 to step 812.
- the first communications device jointly codes at least two pieces of noise measurement information for transmission to said second communications device.
- the at least two pieces of noise measurement information jointly coded are jointly coded as part of a dedicated control channel report, e.g., a self-noise saturation level report.
- the at least two pieces of noise measurement information jointly coded are jointly coded as part of different reports communicated in the same dedicated control channel segment, e.g., a first report communicating a first SNR report associated with a first transmission power level and a second report communicating a second SNR report associated with a second transmission power level, said two pieces of jointly coded noise information providing the second communications device with information to determine a self-noise saturation level value to be associated with the first communications device. Operation proceeds from step 810 to step 812.
- the first communications device communicates noise measurement information corresponding to the first and second signals to the second communications device.
- quantization is used in the communicating of step 812.
- the communicated noise measurement information of step 812 includes one of: i) a theoretical signal to noise ratio assuming a signal transmitted by the second communications device was transmitted at an infinite power level and assuming the receiver could process such a signal; and (ii) an adjusted theoretical signal to noise ratio assuming a signal transmitted by the second communications device was transmitted at an infinite power level and assuming the receiver could process such a signal.
- adjusted means applying an offset in dBs by a predetermined amount.
- the communicated noise measurement information of step 812 includes at least two of: (i) a theoretical signal to noise ratio of a signal transmitted by the second communications device and received by the first communications device in the event the first communications device did not introduce any self-noise; (ii) a theoretical signal to noise ratio of a signal transmitted at a first predetermined power level relative to the transmission power level of one of the first and second received signal; (iii) a theoretical signal to noise ratio of a signal transmitted at a second predetermined power level relative to the transmission power level of one of the first and second received signal, said second predetermined power level being different from said first predetermined power level; (iv) a measured signal to noise ratio of the first received signal; (v) a measured signal to noise ratio of said second received signal; (vi) a measured power level of the first received signal; (vii) a measured power level of the second received signal; (viii) an adjusted theoretical signal to noise ratio of a signal transmitted by the second communications device and received by the first communications device in the event the
- said first and second signals are transmitted on a predetermined basis and noise measurement information is communicated to the second communications device at least once in a beaconslot, said beaconslot being a grouping of a fixed number of OFDM symbol transmission time periods in a recurring timing structure, said fixed number of OFDM symbol transmission time periods being at least 901 consecutive OFDM symbol transmission time periods.
- said noise measurement information is communicated at least once during each beaconslot for a wireless terminal operating in a full-tone mode of DCCH operation, e.g., at least one downlink self-noise saturation SNR DCCH channel report is communicated per beaconslot in accordance with a predetermined channel structure.
- said first and second signals are transmitted on a predetermined basis and noise measurement information is communicated to the second communications device multiple times in a superslot, said superslot being a grouping of a fixed number of OFDM symbol transmission time periods in a recurring timing structure, said fixed number of OFDM symbol transmission time periods being at least 101 consecutive OFDM symbol transmission time periods.
- said first and second signals are non-zero pilot signals transmitted at different power levels and the noise measurement information includes a first quantized SNR value corresponding to measurements of said first signal and a second quantized SNR value corresponding to measurements of said second signal, said noise measurement information is communicated multiple times during each superslot for a wireless terminal operating in a full-tone mode of DCCH operation, e.g., using dedicated control channel reports in accordance with a predetermined channel structure.
- the second communications device e.g., base station
- receiving the dedicated control channel reports conveying the noise measurement information from a wireless terminal uses the received information to determine a downlink self-noise saturation level SNR value which is associated with the wireless terminal.
- a downlink self-noise saturation level SNR value associated with a wireless terminal is used by the base station acting as the wireless terminals physical attachment point in determining downlink traffic channel segment information, e.g., assignment of downlink traffic channel segments to particular wireless terminals, transmission power level to be associated with a particular downlink traffic channel segment at a particular time, and/or data rate option to be used for a particular downlink traffic channel segment at a particular time.
- the techniques of the present invention may be implemented using software, hardware and/or a combination of software and hardware.
- the present invention is directed to apparatus, e.g., mobile nodes such as mobile terminals, base stations, communications system which implement the present invention.
- the present invention is also directed to methods; e.g., method of controlling and/or operating mobile nodes, base stations and/or communications systems, e.g., hosts, in accordance with the present invention.
- the present invention is also directed to machine readable medium, e.g., ROM, RAM, CDs, hard discs, etc., which include machine readable instructions for controlling a machine to implement one or more steps in accordance with the present invention.
- nodes described herein are implemented using one or more modules to perform the steps corresponding to one or more methods of the present invention, for example, null measurement, channel estimation, calculation of DL SNR saturation level, report generation, etc.
- modules may be implemented using software, hardware or a combination of software and hardware.
- Many of the above described methods or method steps can be implemented using machine executable instructions, such as software, included in a machine readable medium such as a memory device, e.g., RAM, floppy disk, etc. to control a machine, e.g., general purpose computer with or without additional hardware, to implement all or portions of the above described methods, e.g., in one or more nodes.
- the present invention is directed to a machine-readable medium including machine executable instructions for causing a machine, e.g., processor and associated hardware, to perform one or more of the steps of the above-described method(s)
- the methods and apparatus of the present invention may be, and in various embodiments are, used with CDMA, orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM), and/or various other types of communications techniques which may be used to provide wireless communications links between access nodes and mobile nodes.
- the access nodes are implemented as base stations which establish communications links with mobile nodes using OFDM and/or CDMA.
- the mobile nodes are implemented as notebook computers, personal data assistants (PDAs), or other portable devices including receiver/transmitter circuits and logic and/or routines, for implementing the methods of the present invention.
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP06845864A EP1969890A2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2006-12-20 | Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise |
JP2008547461A JP5096368B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2006-12-20 | Method and apparatus for generating, communicating and / or using information related to self-noise |
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US75297305P | 2005-12-22 | 2005-12-22 | |
US60/752,973 | 2005-12-22 | ||
US11/333,788 | 2006-01-17 | ||
US11/333,788 US8811348B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2006-01-17 | Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO2007075736A2 true WO2007075736A2 (en) | 2007-07-05 |
WO2007075736A3 WO2007075736A3 (en) | 2008-05-29 |
Family
ID=38159438
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2006/048513 WO2007075736A2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2006-12-20 | Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise |
Country Status (7)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US8811348B2 (en) |
EP (2) | EP1969890A2 (en) |
JP (1) | JP5096368B2 (en) |
KR (1) | KR101030199B1 (en) |
CN (1) | CN104811996A (en) |
TW (1) | TW200742291A (en) |
WO (1) | WO2007075736A2 (en) |
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US8982778B2 (en) | 2005-09-19 | 2015-03-17 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Packet routing in a wireless communications environment |
US9369885B2 (en) | 2011-04-12 | 2016-06-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for selecting reference signal tones for decoding a channel |
US11129062B2 (en) | 2004-08-04 | 2021-09-21 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Enhanced techniques for using core based nodes for state transfer |
Families Citing this family (53)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US9661519B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2017-05-23 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Efficient reporting of information in a wireless communication system |
US7218948B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2007-05-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method of transmitting pilot tones in a multi-sector cell, including null pilot tones, for generating channel quality indicators |
US9544860B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2017-01-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Pilot signals for use in multi-sector cells |
NZ555079A (en) | 2004-10-14 | 2010-04-30 | Qualcomm Inc | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control purposes |
US8503938B2 (en) | 2004-10-14 | 2013-08-06 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information including loading factors which can be used for interference control purposes |
US9078084B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-07-07 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for end node assisted neighbor discovery |
US9066344B2 (en) | 2005-09-19 | 2015-06-23 | Qualcomm Incorporated | State synchronization of access routers |
US8989084B2 (en) | 2005-10-14 | 2015-03-24 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for broadcasting loading information corresponding to neighboring base stations |
US9191840B2 (en) | 2005-10-14 | 2015-11-17 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control |
US20070149132A1 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2007-06-28 | Junyl Li | Methods and apparatus related to selecting control channel reporting formats |
US9148795B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-29 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for flexible reporting of control information |
US9338767B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-05-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus of implementing and/or using a dedicated control channel |
US9119220B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-08-25 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating backlog related information |
US20070249360A1 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2007-10-25 | Arnab Das | Methods and aparatus related to determining, communicating, and/or using delay information in a wireless communications system |
US9137072B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating control information |
US8437251B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2013-05-07 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating transmission backlog information |
US8514771B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2013-08-20 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating and/or using transmission power information |
US9125093B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus related to custom control channel reporting formats |
US9125092B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for reporting and/or using control information |
US9473265B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-10-18 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating information utilizing a plurality of dictionaries |
US9451491B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-09-20 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus relating to generating and transmitting initial and additional control information report sets in a wireless system |
US9572179B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2017-02-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating transmission backlog information |
US8385435B2 (en) * | 2006-02-09 | 2013-02-26 | Broadcom Corporation | Measuring interference and noise power using non-content burst periods |
US9083355B2 (en) | 2006-02-24 | 2015-07-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for end node assisted neighbor discovery |
US20070243882A1 (en) | 2006-04-12 | 2007-10-18 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for locating a wireless local area network associated with a wireless wide area network |
WO2008011264A2 (en) * | 2006-06-30 | 2008-01-24 | Viasat, Inc. | Remote non-linearity detection via burst power dithering |
US7961698B2 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2011-06-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for controlling interference to broadcast signaling in a peer to peer network |
US8861418B2 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2014-10-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for supporting group communications with data re-transmission support |
US8495232B2 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2013-07-23 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for supporting broadcast communications in a peer to peer network |
US8694662B2 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2014-04-08 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for communicating transmission requests to members of a group and/or making group related transmission decisions |
US20090239569A1 (en) * | 2008-03-19 | 2009-09-24 | Martin Dottling | Transmission power reduction in interference limited nodes |
US20090316841A1 (en) * | 2008-06-20 | 2009-12-24 | Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. | Null detection and erasure decoding for frequency selective channels in a broadcasting system |
EP2484157A1 (en) * | 2009-09-30 | 2012-08-08 | Nokia Siemens Networks Oy | Power control |
JP2011109539A (en) * | 2009-11-19 | 2011-06-02 | Sony Corp | Radio communication terminal, communication method, and radio communication system |
CN101951621B (en) * | 2010-09-16 | 2013-04-03 | 新邮通信设备有限公司 | Alarm storm prevention and control method and device |
EP2664080B1 (en) * | 2011-01-14 | 2017-11-01 | Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson (publ) | Antenna weighting in relation to transmissions from two cells |
EP2763446B1 (en) * | 2011-09-28 | 2019-12-11 | Fujitsu Limited | Method, user device and base station for measuring channel state information |
US9735940B1 (en) | 2012-04-12 | 2017-08-15 | Tarana Wireless, Inc. | System architecture for optimizing the capacity of adaptive array systems |
US9252908B1 (en) * | 2012-04-12 | 2016-02-02 | Tarana Wireless, Inc. | Non-line of sight wireless communication system and method |
US8965005B1 (en) * | 2012-06-12 | 2015-02-24 | Amazon Technologies, Inc. | Transmission of noise compensation information between devices |
US9183845B1 (en) | 2012-06-12 | 2015-11-10 | Amazon Technologies, Inc. | Adjusting audio signals based on a specific frequency range associated with environmental noise characteristics |
CN103580835B (en) * | 2012-08-02 | 2018-08-14 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | The method and apparatus of interference measurement is carried out in interferometry resource |
US9265037B2 (en) | 2012-09-14 | 2016-02-16 | Kt Corporation | Transmitting and receiving uplink control channel |
US10110270B2 (en) | 2013-03-14 | 2018-10-23 | Tarana Wireless, Inc. | Precision array processing using semi-coherent transceivers |
US10499456B1 (en) | 2013-03-15 | 2019-12-03 | Tarana Wireless, Inc. | Distributed capacity base station architecture for broadband access with enhanced in-band GPS co-existence |
US10348394B1 (en) | 2014-03-14 | 2019-07-09 | Tarana Wireless, Inc. | System architecture and method for enhancing wireless networks with mini-satellites and pseudollites and adaptive antenna processing |
WO2016021253A1 (en) * | 2014-08-08 | 2016-02-11 | 株式会社Jvcケンウッド | Reception intensity calculation apparatus, reception intensity calculation method, and program |
US9647745B2 (en) * | 2014-10-14 | 2017-05-09 | Regents Of The University Of Minnesota | Channel tracking and transmit beamforming with frugal feedback |
CN107801216B (en) * | 2016-09-06 | 2022-05-31 | 上海诺基亚贝尔软件有限公司 | Method and apparatus for wireless communication |
US10779237B2 (en) * | 2018-10-18 | 2020-09-15 | Microsoft Technology Licensing, Llc | Sharing location data to reduce power consumption |
CN113892242A (en) * | 2019-03-15 | 2022-01-04 | 英特尔公司 | Early uplink retransmission memory release based on uplink retransmission indicator prediction |
US11818666B2 (en) * | 2020-07-16 | 2023-11-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Power configuration of self-interference measurement |
WO2022261225A1 (en) * | 2021-06-09 | 2022-12-15 | OptimERA Inc. | Communications devices, communications systems and associated communications methods |
Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2004077685A2 (en) * | 2003-02-24 | 2004-09-10 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Pilot signals for use in multi-sector cells |
WO2004100450A1 (en) * | 2003-05-09 | 2004-11-18 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | System and method for measurement report time stamping to ensure reference time correctness |
Family Cites Families (402)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE3047045A1 (en) | 1980-12-13 | 1982-07-29 | Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-Gmbh, 6000 Frankfurt | SERVICE INTEGRATED TRANSMISSION SYSTEM |
US4660196A (en) * | 1983-08-01 | 1987-04-21 | Scientific Atlanta, Inc. | Digital audio satellite transmission system |
JPS60182825A (en) | 1984-02-29 | 1985-09-18 | Nec Corp | Radiotelephony system |
US4833701A (en) | 1988-01-27 | 1989-05-23 | Motorola, Inc. | Trunked communication system with nationwide roaming capability |
US5128938A (en) | 1989-03-03 | 1992-07-07 | Motorola, Inc. | Energy saving protocol for a communication system |
US5203013A (en) * | 1990-09-10 | 1993-04-13 | Motorola, Inc. | Radio telephone system supporting busy and out-of-range function |
US5940771A (en) | 1991-05-13 | 1999-08-17 | Norand Corporation | Network supporting roaming, sleeping terminals |
JPH0677963A (en) | 1992-07-07 | 1994-03-18 | Hitachi Ltd | Communication system and terminal equipment |
US5404355A (en) | 1992-10-05 | 1995-04-04 | Ericsson Ge Mobile Communications, Inc. | Method for transmitting broadcast information in a digital control channel |
US5387905A (en) | 1992-10-05 | 1995-02-07 | Motorola, Inc. | Mutli-site group dispatch call method |
ZA938324B (en) | 1992-11-24 | 1994-06-07 | Qualcomm Inc | Pilot carrier dot product circuit |
JP2908175B2 (en) | 1993-05-18 | 1999-06-21 | 日本電気株式会社 | Frequency stabilizer |
US6075025A (en) | 1993-10-15 | 2000-06-13 | Schering Corporation | Tricyclic carbamate compounds useful for inhibition of G-protein function and for treatment of proliferative diseases |
US6157668A (en) | 1993-10-28 | 2000-12-05 | Qualcomm Inc. | Method and apparatus for reducing the average transmit power of a base station |
US5465389A (en) | 1994-02-25 | 1995-11-07 | At&T Corp. | Method of prioritizing handoff procedures in a cellular system |
FI107854B (en) | 1994-03-21 | 2001-10-15 | Nokia Networks Oy | A method for eliminating interference in a CDMA cellular network |
FI96468C (en) | 1994-05-11 | 1996-06-25 | Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd | Controlling the handover of a mobile radio station and adjusting the transmission power in the radio communication system |
FI98598C (en) | 1994-06-28 | 1997-07-10 | Nokia Telecommunications Oy | Mobile radio system and method of controlling subscriber searches in a mobile radio system |
US5434848A (en) | 1994-07-28 | 1995-07-18 | International Business Machines Corporation | Traffic management in packet communications networks |
JPH08256102A (en) | 1995-01-19 | 1996-10-01 | Sony Corp | Cellular system |
DE69634889T2 (en) | 1995-01-25 | 2005-12-08 | Ntt Docomo Inc. | MOBILE RADIO COMMUNICATION ARRANGEMENT |
GB2297460B (en) | 1995-01-28 | 1999-05-26 | Motorola Ltd | Communications system and a method therefor |
US5579307A (en) | 1995-03-23 | 1996-11-26 | Motorola, Inc. | Packet routing system and method with quasi-real-time control |
US5732328A (en) | 1995-04-25 | 1998-03-24 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Method for power control in wireless networks for communicating multiple information classes |
JP3581430B2 (en) | 1995-05-18 | 2004-10-27 | キヤノン株式会社 | Wireless switching system, communication device, and communication method |
US5915221A (en) | 1995-08-08 | 1999-06-22 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson | Neighbor cell list creation and verification in a telecommunications system |
US5835847A (en) | 1996-04-02 | 1998-11-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Pilot signal strength control for a low earth orbiting satellite communications system |
US6496700B1 (en) | 1996-04-04 | 2002-12-17 | At&T Wireless Services, Inc. | Method for determining organization parameters in a wireless communication system |
US6035000A (en) | 1996-04-19 | 2000-03-07 | Amati Communications Corporation | Mitigating radio frequency interference in multi-carrier transmission systems |
US6377583B1 (en) | 1996-06-27 | 2002-04-23 | Xerox Corporation | Rate shaping in per-flow output queued routing mechanisms for unspecified bit rate service |
JP2839014B2 (en) | 1996-07-05 | 1998-12-16 | 日本電気株式会社 | Transmission power control method for code division multiplexing cellular system |
DE69722415T2 (en) * | 1996-09-02 | 2004-05-06 | Stmicroelectronics N.V. | IMPROVEMENTS IN OR WITH REGARD TO CONTROL CHANNELS FOR MESSAGE TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS |
US6233456B1 (en) | 1996-09-27 | 2001-05-15 | Qualcomm Inc. | Method and apparatus for adjacent coverage area handoff in communication systems |
US6111870A (en) * | 1996-11-07 | 2000-08-29 | Interdigital Technology Corporation | Method and apparatus for compressing and transmitting high speed data |
US6075974A (en) | 1996-11-20 | 2000-06-13 | Qualcomm Inc. | Method and apparatus for adjusting thresholds and measurements of received signals by anticipating power control commands yet to be executed |
US6028842A (en) | 1996-12-23 | 2000-02-22 | Nortel Networks Corporation | Dynamic traffic conditioning |
US5999534A (en) | 1996-12-26 | 1999-12-07 | Daewoo Electronics Co., Ltd. | Method and apparatus for scheduling cells for use in a static priority scheduler |
US5933421A (en) | 1997-02-06 | 1999-08-03 | At&T Wireless Services Inc. | Method for frequency division duplex communications |
JPH10290475A (en) | 1997-02-12 | 1998-10-27 | Fujitsu Ltd | Mobile communication system |
US6004276A (en) | 1997-03-03 | 1999-12-21 | Quinton Instrument Company | Open architecture cardiology information system |
US6169896B1 (en) | 1997-03-12 | 2001-01-02 | Emerald Bay Systems, Inc. | System for evaluating communication network services |
US6028843A (en) | 1997-03-25 | 2000-02-22 | International Business Machines Corporation | Earliest deadline first communications cell scheduler and scheduling method for transmitting earliest deadline cells first |
US6073025A (en) | 1997-03-26 | 2000-06-06 | Nortel Networks Corporation | Base station power control during a soft hand-off |
US5914950A (en) | 1997-04-08 | 1999-06-22 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for reverse link rate scheduling |
US5923650A (en) | 1997-04-08 | 1999-07-13 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for reverse link rate scheduling |
FI102866B (en) | 1997-04-09 | 1999-02-26 | Nokia Telecommunications Oy | Reduction of interference in the mobile communication system |
KR100245329B1 (en) | 1997-04-30 | 2000-02-15 | 전주범 | Apparatus of managing a queue by priority for controlling jitter in a packet network |
ATE245332T1 (en) | 1997-05-09 | 2003-08-15 | Nokia Corp | METHOD FOR DETERMINING THE TIME DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RADIO TRANSMITTERS, RADIO NETWORK WITH SUCH RADIO TRANSMITTERS AND CORRESPONDING MOBILE STATION |
US6308080B1 (en) | 1997-05-16 | 2001-10-23 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | Power control in point-to-multipoint systems |
US6259927B1 (en) | 1997-06-06 | 2001-07-10 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson | Transmit power control in a radio communication system |
US6310857B1 (en) | 1997-06-16 | 2001-10-30 | At&T Corp. | Method and apparatus for smoothing and multiplexing video data flows |
US6081536A (en) | 1997-06-20 | 2000-06-27 | Tantivy Communications, Inc. | Dynamic bandwidth allocation to transmit a wireless protocol across a code division multiple access (CDMA) radio link |
US5867478A (en) | 1997-06-20 | 1999-02-02 | Motorola, Inc. | Synchronous coherent orthogonal frequency division multiplexing system, method, software and device |
SE9702408L (en) | 1997-06-24 | 1998-12-25 | Ericsson Telefon Ab L M | Sectorization of a cellular CDMA system |
US6002676A (en) | 1997-06-30 | 1999-12-14 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for selecting a resource in a communication system with resources having unbalanced load capacity |
JP3094957B2 (en) | 1997-06-30 | 2000-10-03 | 日本電気株式会社 | Radio base station reception data transmission system in uplink selection site diversity of mobile communication system |
US6070072A (en) | 1997-07-16 | 2000-05-30 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for intelligently generating an error report in a radio communication system |
US6069871A (en) | 1997-07-21 | 2000-05-30 | Nortel Networks Corporation | Traffic allocation and dynamic load balancing in a multiple carrier cellular wireless communication system |
US6055428A (en) | 1997-07-21 | 2000-04-25 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for performing soft hand-off in a wireless communication system |
US5966657A (en) | 1997-07-24 | 1999-10-12 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) | Method and system for radio frequency measurement and automatic frequency planning in a cellular radio system |
US6038263A (en) | 1997-07-31 | 2000-03-14 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for transmitting signals in a communication system |
US6131016A (en) | 1997-08-27 | 2000-10-10 | At&T Corp | Method and apparatus for enhancing communication reception at a wireless communication terminal |
US6173005B1 (en) | 1997-09-04 | 2001-01-09 | Motorola, Inc. | Apparatus and method for transmitting signals in a communication system |
US6236646B1 (en) | 1997-09-09 | 2001-05-22 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Packet data communications scheduling in a spread spectrum communications system |
US6128506A (en) | 1997-09-24 | 2000-10-03 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson | Integrated power control and congestion control in a communication system |
US6567416B1 (en) | 1997-10-14 | 2003-05-20 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Method for access control in a multiple access system for communications networks |
US6141565A (en) | 1997-11-13 | 2000-10-31 | Metawave Communications Corporation | Dynamic mobile parameter optimization |
JP3270015B2 (en) * | 1997-11-19 | 2002-04-02 | 沖電気工業株式会社 | Transmission power control device |
US6201793B1 (en) | 1998-03-16 | 2001-03-13 | Lucent Technologies | Packet delay estimation in high speed packet switches |
JP3463555B2 (en) | 1998-03-17 | 2003-11-05 | ソニー株式会社 | Wireless communication method, wireless communication system, communication station, and control station |
FI105725B (en) | 1998-04-08 | 2000-09-29 | Nokia Networks Oy | Calculation method and radio system |
JP3309156B2 (en) | 1998-04-13 | 2002-07-29 | 株式会社平和 | Card type pachinko machine |
JP3429674B2 (en) | 1998-04-28 | 2003-07-22 | 沖電気工業株式会社 | Multiplex communication system |
EP0993706B1 (en) | 1998-05-13 | 2008-04-16 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Reception of both Time-Switched Transmission Diversity (TSTD) Signals and non-TSTD Signals |
US6625133B1 (en) | 1998-05-17 | 2003-09-23 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | System and method for link and media access control layer transaction initiation procedures |
JP3461124B2 (en) | 1998-07-30 | 2003-10-27 | 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ | Interference signal power measurement method |
KR100339034B1 (en) | 1998-08-25 | 2002-10-11 | 삼성전자 주식회사 | Reverse-loop closed-loop power control device and method in control-split state of code division multiple access communication system |
FI982121A (en) | 1998-09-30 | 2000-03-31 | Nokia Networks Oy | Power control in the radio system |
US6961314B1 (en) * | 1998-10-30 | 2005-11-01 | Broadcom Corporation | Burst receiver for cable modem system |
JP4510294B2 (en) | 1998-11-13 | 2010-07-21 | ローベルト ボツシユ ゲゼルシヤフト ミツト ベシユレンクテル ハフツング | In particular, a method and apparatus for driving a communication terminal device in a power saving mode in a wireless communication system |
US6438561B1 (en) | 1998-11-19 | 2002-08-20 | Navigation Technologies Corp. | Method and system for using real-time traffic broadcasts with navigation systems |
KR100315670B1 (en) | 1998-12-07 | 2001-11-29 | 윤종용 | Apparatus and method for gating transmission of cdma communication system |
FI107773B (en) | 1998-12-11 | 2001-09-28 | Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd | Set handover timing |
GB9827503D0 (en) | 1998-12-14 | 1999-02-10 | Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd | Method for determining service availability |
WO2000038348A1 (en) | 1998-12-18 | 2000-06-29 | Nokia Networks Oy | A method for traffic load control in a telecommunication network |
US6263392B1 (en) | 1999-01-04 | 2001-07-17 | Mccauley Jack J. | Method and apparatus for interfacing multiple peripheral devices to a host computer |
US7406098B2 (en) | 1999-01-13 | 2008-07-29 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Resource allocation in a communication system supporting application flows having quality of service requirements |
US6205129B1 (en) | 1999-01-15 | 2001-03-20 | Qualcomm Inc. | Method and apparatus for variable and fixed forward link rate control in a mobile radio communications system |
US6256478B1 (en) | 1999-02-18 | 2001-07-03 | Eastman Kodak Company | Dynamic packet sizing in an RF communications system |
EP1037491A1 (en) | 1999-03-17 | 2000-09-20 | Motorola Limited | A CDMA cellular communication system and method of access therefor |
CA2300385A1 (en) | 1999-03-18 | 2000-09-18 | Command Audio Corporation | Program links and bulletins for audio information delivery |
US6377955B1 (en) | 1999-03-30 | 2002-04-23 | Cisco Technology, Inc. | Method and apparatus for generating user-specified reports from radius information |
US6477169B1 (en) | 1999-05-14 | 2002-11-05 | Nortel Networks Limited | Multicast and unicast scheduling for a network device |
US6597922B1 (en) | 1999-05-14 | 2003-07-22 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for efficient candidate frequency search while initiating a handoff in a code division multiple access communication system |
US6445917B1 (en) | 1999-05-19 | 2002-09-03 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Mobile station measurements with event-based reporting |
EP1054518B1 (en) | 1999-05-21 | 2004-04-28 | Alcatel Alsthom Compagnie Generale D'electricite | A method for improving performances of a mobile radiocommunication system using power control |
CA2375896C (en) | 1999-05-31 | 2006-04-04 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Apparatus and method for gated transmission in cdma communication system |
US6453151B1 (en) | 1999-06-21 | 2002-09-17 | Lucent Technologies, Inc. | Method of reducing resource assignment overhead in wireless communication systems |
US6553336B1 (en) | 1999-06-25 | 2003-04-22 | Telemonitor, Inc. | Smart remote monitoring system and method |
CN1161900C (en) | 1999-06-28 | 2004-08-11 | 三星电子株式会社 | Apparatus and method of controlling forward link power when in discotinuous transmission mode in mobile communication system |
JP2001016152A (en) | 1999-06-30 | 2001-01-19 | Mitsubishi Electric Corp | Wireless repeater |
US6731904B1 (en) * | 1999-07-20 | 2004-05-04 | Andrew Corporation | Side-to-side repeater |
US6493539B1 (en) | 1999-07-28 | 2002-12-10 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Providing an accurate timing source for locating the geographical position of a mobile |
US6621808B1 (en) | 1999-08-13 | 2003-09-16 | International Business Machines Corporation | Adaptive power control based on a rake receiver configuration in wideband CDMA cellular systems (WCDMA) and methods of operation |
US6298233B1 (en) | 1999-08-13 | 2001-10-02 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus in a two-way wireless communication system for detection and deferred reporting of a communication difficulty |
US7054267B2 (en) | 1999-09-10 | 2006-05-30 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Method and apparatus for scheduling traffic to meet quality of service requirements in a communication network |
US6609007B1 (en) | 1999-09-14 | 2003-08-19 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Apparatus and method for controlling the transmission power of the forward link of a wireless communication system |
MY125299A (en) | 1999-09-15 | 2006-07-31 | Ericsson Inc | Methods and systems for specifying a quality of service for communication between a mobile station and a packet wireless communications network based upon an application that is executing on the mobile station. |
GB9922217D0 (en) | 1999-09-20 | 1999-11-17 | Nokia Telecommunications Oy | Reporting in a cellular communication system |
US6885868B1 (en) | 1999-09-30 | 2005-04-26 | Nortel Networks Limited | Fair packet scheduler and scheduling method for packet data radio |
US6680909B1 (en) | 1999-11-04 | 2004-01-20 | International Business Machines Corporation | Media access control scheduling methodology in master driven time division duplex wireless Pico-cellular systems |
US6985466B1 (en) | 1999-11-09 | 2006-01-10 | Arraycomm, Inc. | Downlink signal processing in CDMA systems utilizing arrays of antennae |
JP3506072B2 (en) | 1999-11-10 | 2004-03-15 | 日本電気株式会社 | CDMA mobile communication system and communication control method |
US6405047B1 (en) | 1999-12-01 | 2002-06-11 | Samsung Electronics, Co., Ltd. | Device and method for tracking mobile station's position in mobile communication system |
US6967937B1 (en) | 1999-12-17 | 2005-11-22 | Cingular Wireless Ii, Llc | Collision-free multiple access reservation scheme for multi-tone modulation links |
DE60018799T2 (en) | 1999-12-23 | 2006-01-26 | Cetacean Networks, Inc. | NETWORK TRANSMISSION WITH PACKAGE CONTROL |
WO2001054301A2 (en) | 2000-01-18 | 2001-07-26 | Nortel Networks Limited | Multi-beam antenna system with reduced cross-beam interference |
US6590890B1 (en) | 2000-03-03 | 2003-07-08 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Method of packet scheduling, with improved delay performance, for wireless networks |
JP4495821B2 (en) | 2000-03-06 | 2010-07-07 | 株式会社東芝 | Data transmission system and its communication device |
JP3735003B2 (en) | 2000-03-30 | 2006-01-11 | 松下電器産業株式会社 | Mobile station apparatus and transmission power control method |
JP2003532331A (en) | 2000-04-26 | 2003-10-28 | サムスン エレクトロニクス カンパニー リミテッド | Method for supporting power control of dedicated control channel in base station system |
CN101127546A (en) | 2000-04-27 | 2008-02-20 | 三星电子株式会社 | Method of supporting power control on supplemental channel in base station |
CN1327723C (en) | 2000-05-01 | 2007-07-18 | 交互数字技术公司 | Downlink power control for multiple downlink time slots in tdd communication systems |
WO2001084862A2 (en) | 2000-05-03 | 2001-11-08 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Calibration of positioning systems |
US20010040877A1 (en) | 2000-05-09 | 2001-11-15 | Motorola, Inc. | Method of dynamic transmit scheduling using channel quality feedback |
US6742020B1 (en) | 2000-06-08 | 2004-05-25 | Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. | System and method for managing data flow and measuring service in a storage network |
DE60035683T2 (en) | 2000-08-01 | 2008-06-26 | Sony Deutschland Gmbh | Frequency reuse scheme for OFDM systems |
JP2002051050A (en) | 2000-08-02 | 2002-02-15 | Sony Corp | Wireless transmission method and wireless transmission device |
JP4825372B2 (en) | 2000-08-09 | 2011-11-30 | エスケーテレコム株式会社 | Handover method in wireless communication system supporting reverse synchronization transmission system |
CA2351968A1 (en) | 2000-08-11 | 2002-02-11 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Adaptive data scheduling using neighboring base station load information for tdma systems |
US6980540B1 (en) | 2000-08-16 | 2005-12-27 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Apparatus and method for acquiring an uplink traffic channel, in wireless communications systems |
WO2002019171A1 (en) | 2000-08-30 | 2002-03-07 | Environmental Information Systems, Inc. | Materials analytical review and reporting system |
JP3737353B2 (en) | 2000-09-28 | 2006-01-18 | 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ | COMMUNICATION DEVICE AND COMMUNICATION LINE ALLOCATION METHOD |
AU1516202A (en) | 2000-10-09 | 2002-04-22 | Nokia Corp | Radio resource management |
WO2002032183A1 (en) | 2000-10-13 | 2002-04-18 | Blue2Space Ab | A method and an arrangement for implementing communication between distributed radio modules and a single baseband |
US6810246B1 (en) | 2000-10-23 | 2004-10-26 | Verizon Laboratories Inc. | Method and system for analyzing digital wireless network performance |
US8111689B2 (en) | 2001-01-16 | 2012-02-07 | Nokia Corporation | System for uplink scheduling packet based data traffic in wireless system |
JP2004533731A (en) | 2000-11-07 | 2004-11-04 | ノキア コーポレイション | System for uplink scheduling packet based on data traffic in wireless system |
US6901270B1 (en) | 2000-11-17 | 2005-05-31 | Symbol Technologies, Inc. | Apparatus and method for wireless communication |
US6947748B2 (en) | 2000-12-15 | 2005-09-20 | Adaptix, Inc. | OFDMA with adaptive subcarrier-cluster configuration and selective loading |
US6891821B2 (en) | 2000-12-20 | 2005-05-10 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Self-aligning backhaul system, method and apparatus |
US7006841B2 (en) * | 2000-12-20 | 2006-02-28 | Lucent Technologies Inc | Method to control base station transmit power drift during soft handoffs |
US6836673B1 (en) * | 2000-12-22 | 2004-12-28 | Arraycomm, Inc. | Mitigating ghost signal interference in adaptive array systems |
DE60144510D1 (en) | 2000-12-27 | 2011-06-09 | Canon Kk | Wireless communication system with control of transmission timing |
US7224801B2 (en) | 2000-12-27 | 2007-05-29 | Logitech Europe S.A. | Wireless secure device |
KR100754633B1 (en) | 2000-12-27 | 2007-09-05 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Transmitting/receiving apparatus and method for packet data service in a mobile telecommunication system |
US7039027B2 (en) | 2000-12-28 | 2006-05-02 | Symbol Technologies, Inc. | Automatic and seamless vertical roaming between wireless local area network (WLAN) and wireless wide area network (WWAN) while maintaining an active voice or streaming data connection: systems, methods and program products |
WO2002058638A2 (en) | 2001-01-26 | 2002-08-01 | The General Hospital Corporation | Serpin drugs for treatment of hiv infection and method of use thereof |
US6665540B2 (en) | 2001-02-02 | 2003-12-16 | Nokia Mobile Phones, Ltd. | Method and system for locating a mobile terminal in a cellular radio network |
US7164883B2 (en) | 2001-02-14 | 2007-01-16 | Motorola. Inc. | Method and system for modeling and managing terrain, buildings, and infrastructure |
US7120134B2 (en) | 2001-02-15 | 2006-10-10 | Qualcomm, Incorporated | Reverse link channel architecture for a wireless communication system |
CN1265792C (en) | 2001-03-08 | 2006-07-26 | 肯塔基大学研究基金会 | Method for increasing leptin levels using nicotinic acid compounds |
US6940827B2 (en) | 2001-03-09 | 2005-09-06 | Adaptix, Inc. | Communication system using OFDM for one direction and DSSS for another direction |
US7058085B2 (en) | 2001-03-14 | 2006-06-06 | Nortel Networks Limited | Method and apparatus for transmitting data over a network within a specified time limit |
US20020143858A1 (en) | 2001-03-29 | 2002-10-03 | William Teague | Report scheduler |
SE0101281D0 (en) | 2001-04-06 | 2001-04-06 | Ericsson Telefon Ab L M | Method and system of link control |
US6978144B1 (en) | 2001-04-19 | 2005-12-20 | Cisco Technology, Inc. | Method and system for managing real-time bandwidth in a wireless network |
US6895005B1 (en) | 2001-04-23 | 2005-05-17 | Sprint Spectrum L.P. | Business logic server for facilitating the transmission of a data download to a mobile wireless unit |
US7123893B1 (en) | 2001-04-24 | 2006-10-17 | Bellsouth Intellectual Property Corp. | Wireless frequency re-use determination systems and methods |
US6889056B2 (en) | 2001-04-30 | 2005-05-03 | Ntt Docomo, Inc. | Transmission control scheme |
ATE350868T1 (en) | 2001-05-10 | 2007-01-15 | Nortel Networks Ltd | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR DIRECTING COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS USING DIFFERENT RADIO ACCESS TECHNOLOGIES |
US6662024B2 (en) | 2001-05-16 | 2003-12-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for allocating downlink resources in a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication system |
US7024460B2 (en) | 2001-07-31 | 2006-04-04 | Bytemobile, Inc. | Service-based compression of content within a network communication system |
US6751187B2 (en) | 2001-05-17 | 2004-06-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for processing data for transmission in a multi-channel communication system using selective channel transmission |
EP1261147A1 (en) | 2001-05-21 | 2002-11-27 | Motorola, Inc. | A method and system for simultaneous bi-directional wireless communication between a user station and first and second base stations |
GB2372172B (en) | 2001-05-31 | 2002-12-24 | Ericsson Telefon Ab L M | Congestion handling in a packet data network |
US6865176B2 (en) | 2001-06-08 | 2005-03-08 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for resolving half duplex message collisions |
US7206350B2 (en) | 2001-06-11 | 2007-04-17 | Unique Broadband Systems, Inc. | OFDM multiple sub-channel communication system |
CA2450458C (en) | 2001-06-13 | 2015-04-07 | Interdigital Acquisition Corp. | System and method for coordination of wireless maintenance channel power control |
US6771934B2 (en) | 2001-06-19 | 2004-08-03 | Telcordia Technologies, Inc. | Methods and systems for reducing interference across coverage cells |
CN1547861A (en) | 2001-06-27 | 2004-11-17 | ���˹���Ѷ��� | Communication of control information in wireless communication systems |
JP3608532B2 (en) | 2001-06-28 | 2005-01-12 | 日本電気株式会社 | Adjacent frequency interference avoidance method for cellular system, cellular system, mobile station, and base station controller |
US6697417B2 (en) | 2001-07-27 | 2004-02-24 | Qualcomm, Inc | System and method of estimating earliest arrival of CDMA forward and reverse link signals |
US6807428B2 (en) | 2001-08-16 | 2004-10-19 | Qualcomm, Incorporated | Method and apparatus for time-based reception of transmissions in a wireless communication system |
GB0120033D0 (en) | 2001-08-16 | 2001-10-10 | Fujitsu Ltd | Cell selection |
US20030064737A1 (en) * | 2001-09-28 | 2003-04-03 | Patrik Eriksson | Method and apparatus for distortionless peak reduction |
US7200144B2 (en) | 2001-10-18 | 2007-04-03 | Qlogic, Corp. | Router and methods using network addresses for virtualization |
US7349667B2 (en) | 2001-10-19 | 2008-03-25 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | Simplified noise estimation and/or beamforming for wireless communications |
KR100827147B1 (en) * | 2001-10-19 | 2008-05-02 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Transceiver and method for re-transmission and decording of high speed data in cdma mobile communication system |
US6710651B2 (en) | 2001-10-22 | 2004-03-23 | Kyocera Wireless Corp. | Systems and methods for controlling output power in a communication device |
KR100493079B1 (en) | 2001-11-02 | 2005-06-02 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Apparatus for reporting quality of downlink channel in wide band-code division multiple access communication system using high speed data packet access scheme and method thereof |
GB2392801B (en) | 2001-11-05 | 2005-08-17 | Nokia Corp | A method for identification of base stations and for checking measurement values of an observed time difference between transmissions from base stations |
DE20117865U1 (en) | 2001-11-06 | 2002-02-28 | Agrotel Gmbh | closure device |
US6904016B2 (en) | 2001-11-16 | 2005-06-07 | Asustek Computer Inc. | Processing unexpected transmission interruptions in a wireless communications system |
US7400901B2 (en) | 2001-11-19 | 2008-07-15 | At&T Corp. | WLAN having load balancing based on access point loading |
US6594501B2 (en) | 2001-12-14 | 2003-07-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Systems and techniques for channel gain computations |
US7626932B2 (en) | 2001-12-21 | 2009-12-01 | Nokia Corporation | Traffic control in an IP based network |
KR100434382B1 (en) | 2001-12-28 | 2004-06-04 | 엘지전자 주식회사 | Scheduling apparatus and method for forward link speed compensating |
US7873985B2 (en) | 2002-01-08 | 2011-01-18 | Verizon Services Corp. | IP based security applications using location, port and/or device identifier information |
US6982987B2 (en) | 2002-01-10 | 2006-01-03 | Harris Corporation | Wireless communication network including data prioritization and packet reception error determination features and related methods |
US7299277B1 (en) | 2002-01-10 | 2007-11-20 | Network General Technology | Media module apparatus and method for use in a network monitoring environment |
US6798761B2 (en) | 2002-01-10 | 2004-09-28 | Harris Corporation | Method and device for establishing communication links and handling SP slot connection collisions in a communication system |
US20030144042A1 (en) | 2002-01-29 | 2003-07-31 | Aaron Weinfield | Negotiation of position information during low battery life |
JP3828431B2 (en) | 2002-01-31 | 2006-10-04 | 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ | Base station, control apparatus, communication system, and communication method |
AU2003239272A1 (en) | 2002-02-01 | 2003-09-02 | Ciba Specialty Chemicals Holdings Inc. | Fluorescent compositions comprising diketopyrrolopyrroles |
JP3634806B2 (en) | 2002-02-18 | 2005-03-30 | エヌ・ティ・ティ・コムウェア株式会社 | Wireless LAN system connection device, wireless LAN connection method, wireless LAN system program, and wireless LAN system recording medium |
AU2003212004A1 (en) | 2002-02-18 | 2003-09-04 | Sony Corporation | Wireless communication system, wireless communication device and wireless communication method, and computer program |
US7054643B2 (en) * | 2002-02-20 | 2006-05-30 | Nokia Corporation | System for rate control of multicast data delivery in a wireless network |
US7986672B2 (en) | 2002-02-25 | 2011-07-26 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for channel quality feedback in a wireless communication |
US7251228B2 (en) | 2002-03-05 | 2007-07-31 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Method for cell switching in wireless communication systems |
US7012978B2 (en) | 2002-03-26 | 2006-03-14 | Intel Corporation | Robust multiple chain receiver |
WO2003086005A1 (en) | 2002-04-09 | 2003-10-16 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Methods, configuration and computer program having program code means and computer program product for determining a position of a mobile communications device within a communications network |
CN1572080B (en) | 2002-04-09 | 2011-04-06 | 松下移动通信株式会社 | OFDM communication method and OFDM communication device |
WO2003085878A1 (en) | 2002-04-10 | 2003-10-16 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | Communication system using arq |
US7340267B2 (en) | 2002-04-17 | 2008-03-04 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Uplink power control algorithm |
US20040203717A1 (en) | 2002-04-23 | 2004-10-14 | Edward Wingrowicz | Method, system and radio network management functionality for radio data mapping to physical location in a cellular telecommunications network |
US20040047312A1 (en) | 2002-04-29 | 2004-03-11 | Peter Muszynski | Method and apparatus for UL interference avoidance by DL measurements and IFHO |
TWI225373B (en) | 2002-05-03 | 2004-12-11 | Asustek Comp Inc | A flexible scheme for configuring traffic volume measurement reporting criteria |
US7099680B2 (en) | 2002-05-03 | 2006-08-29 | M/A-Com Private Radio Systems, Inc. | Data interface protocol for two-way radio communication systems |
KR100932482B1 (en) | 2002-05-03 | 2009-12-17 | 엘지전자 주식회사 | Frame transmission method for cell or sector switching |
AU2003228926A1 (en) | 2002-05-10 | 2003-11-11 | Interdigital Technology Corporation | Method for monitoring transmission sequence numbers assigned to protocol data units to detect and correct transmission errors |
US8089879B2 (en) | 2002-05-15 | 2012-01-03 | Alcatel Lucent | In-band flow control methods for communications systems |
US7260054B2 (en) | 2002-05-30 | 2007-08-21 | Denso Corporation | SINR measurement method for OFDM communications systems |
US6768715B2 (en) | 2002-06-07 | 2004-07-27 | Nokia Corporation | Apparatus, and associated method, for performing reverse-link traffic measurements in a radio communication system |
US7551546B2 (en) | 2002-06-27 | 2009-06-23 | Nortel Networks Limited | Dual-mode shared OFDM methods/transmitters, receivers and systems |
US7162203B1 (en) | 2002-08-01 | 2007-01-09 | Christopher Brunner | Method and system for adaptive modification of cell boundary |
US6788963B2 (en) | 2002-08-08 | 2004-09-07 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Methods and apparatus for operating mobile nodes in multiple a states |
US6961595B2 (en) | 2002-08-08 | 2005-11-01 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Methods and apparatus for operating mobile nodes in multiple states |
DE10240238A1 (en) | 2002-08-31 | 2004-03-18 | Robert Bosch Gmbh | Connection cable for a sensor |
US20040081089A1 (en) | 2002-09-26 | 2004-04-29 | Sharp Laboratories Of America, Inc. | Transmitting data on scheduled channels in a centralized network |
US20040062206A1 (en) | 2002-09-30 | 2004-04-01 | Soong Anthony C.K. | System and method for fast reverse link scheduling in a wireless communication network |
AU2003284014A1 (en) | 2002-10-03 | 2004-04-23 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Method to convey uplink traffic information |
US8218609B2 (en) | 2002-10-25 | 2012-07-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Closed-loop rate control for a multi-channel communication system |
JP3877158B2 (en) | 2002-10-31 | 2007-02-07 | ソニー・エリクソン・モバイルコミュニケーションズ株式会社 | Frequency deviation detection circuit, frequency deviation detection method, and portable communication terminal |
US7333457B2 (en) | 2002-11-06 | 2008-02-19 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | High speed dedicated physical control channel for use in wireless data transmissions from mobile devices |
JP4186042B2 (en) | 2002-11-14 | 2008-11-26 | 日本電気株式会社 | Wireless communication information collection method, information collection system, and mobile radio terminal |
JP2004180154A (en) | 2002-11-28 | 2004-06-24 | Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd | Base station device and adaptive modulation method |
KR100462321B1 (en) | 2002-12-16 | 2004-12-17 | 한국전자통신연구원 | system for down-link packet scheduling of mobile connuvication and method thereof, its program stored recording medium |
GB2396523B (en) * | 2002-12-17 | 2006-01-25 | Motorola Inc | Method and apparatus for power control for a transmitter in a cellular communication system |
US20040147276A1 (en) | 2002-12-17 | 2004-07-29 | Ralph Gholmieh | Reduced signaling power headroom feedback |
EP1576775A2 (en) | 2002-12-19 | 2005-09-21 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | Protecting real-time data in wireless networks |
US20040125776A1 (en) | 2002-12-26 | 2004-07-01 | Haugli Hans C. | Peer-to-peer wireless data communication system with progressive dynamic routing |
KR100950652B1 (en) * | 2003-01-08 | 2010-04-01 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method for estimating forward link channel condition in orthogonal frequency division multiplexing access |
KR100476456B1 (en) | 2003-02-05 | 2005-03-17 | 삼성전자주식회사 | xDSL Transceiver Unit-Central office Performance, Characteristics and Compatibility Tester and Method thereof |
US20040160922A1 (en) | 2003-02-18 | 2004-08-19 | Sanjiv Nanda | Method and apparatus for controlling data rate of a reverse link in a communication system |
FR2851400B1 (en) | 2003-02-18 | 2005-06-10 | Nortel Networks Ltd | METHOD FOR CONTROLLING A MEASUREMENT REPORT MODE ON A RADIO INTERFACE AND RADIO NETWORK CONTROLLER FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE METHOD |
BRPI0407606A (en) | 2003-02-19 | 2006-02-21 | Flarion Technologies Inc | improved coding methods and apparatus in multi-user communication systems |
US9544860B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2017-01-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Pilot signals for use in multi-sector cells |
US7218948B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2007-05-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method of transmitting pilot tones in a multi-sector cell, including null pilot tones, for generating channel quality indicators |
US9661519B2 (en) | 2003-02-24 | 2017-05-23 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Efficient reporting of information in a wireless communication system |
US7551588B2 (en) | 2003-03-06 | 2009-06-23 | Nortel Networks Limited | Autonomous mode transmission from a mobile station |
US7142548B2 (en) | 2003-03-06 | 2006-11-28 | Nortel Networks Limited | Communicating in a reverse wireless link information relating to buffer status and data rate of a mobile station |
CN1316140C (en) | 2003-03-21 | 2007-05-16 | 李国龙 | Combined working platform for oil/water well |
EP1460789B1 (en) | 2003-03-21 | 2008-08-20 | Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson (publ) | Method and apparatus for link adaptation |
EP1606891B1 (en) * | 2003-03-24 | 2006-08-23 | Research In Motion Limited | Method and system for power control during the traffic channel initialization period in a cdma network |
JP4247019B2 (en) | 2003-03-24 | 2009-04-02 | 京セラ株式会社 | Wireless communication device |
JP2004297284A (en) | 2003-03-26 | 2004-10-21 | Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd | Communication terminal and wireless communication method |
KR100553543B1 (en) | 2003-03-29 | 2006-02-20 | 에스케이 텔레콤주식회사 | Method and System for Packet Scheduling for Guaranteeing Minimum Transfer Delay in CDMA EV-DO Mobile Communication System |
KR20040086490A (en) | 2003-04-02 | 2004-10-11 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Apparatus and method for controlling reverse link data rate of packet data in a mobile communication system |
US7640373B2 (en) | 2003-04-25 | 2009-12-29 | Motorola, Inc. | Method and apparatus for channel quality feedback within a communication system |
US6993342B2 (en) | 2003-05-07 | 2006-01-31 | Motorola, Inc. | Buffer occupancy used in uplink scheduling for a communication device |
WO2004100451A1 (en) | 2003-05-09 | 2004-11-18 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | System and method for specifying measurement request start time |
US20040228313A1 (en) | 2003-05-16 | 2004-11-18 | Fang-Chen Cheng | Method of mapping data for uplink transmission in communication systems |
US7162250B2 (en) | 2003-05-16 | 2007-01-09 | International Business Machines Corporation | Method and apparatus for load sharing in wireless access networks based on dynamic transmission power adjustment of access points |
JP4252842B2 (en) | 2003-05-22 | 2009-04-08 | 株式会社エヌ・ティ・ティ・ドコモ | Management node device, wireless communication system, load distribution method and program |
WO2004109476A2 (en) | 2003-06-05 | 2004-12-16 | Meshnetworks, Inc. | System and method to maximize channel utilization in a multi-channel wireless communication network |
US7764966B2 (en) | 2003-06-10 | 2010-07-27 | Nokia Corporation | Method and apparatus for switching mobile station between autonomous and scheduled transmissions |
US7412265B2 (en) | 2003-06-12 | 2008-08-12 | Industrial Technology Research Institute | Method and system for power-saving in a wireless local area network |
KR100547734B1 (en) | 2003-06-13 | 2006-01-31 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Operation state control method of media access control layer in mobile communication system using orthogonal frequency division multiplexing |
US7158796B2 (en) | 2003-06-16 | 2007-01-02 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Apparatus, system, and method for autonomously managing reverse link communication resources in a distributed communication system |
US7440755B2 (en) | 2003-06-17 | 2008-10-21 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) | System and method for locating a wireless local area network |
KR20040110044A (en) | 2003-06-20 | 2004-12-29 | 김영용 | BBS(Buffer Based Scheduler) for CDMA 1x EV-DO type system supporting diverse multimedia traffic |
US6954643B2 (en) | 2003-06-25 | 2005-10-11 | Arraycomm Llc | Criteria for base station selection, including handover, in a wireless communication system |
US8971913B2 (en) | 2003-06-27 | 2015-03-03 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for wireless network hybrid positioning |
US7266101B2 (en) | 2003-06-30 | 2007-09-04 | Motorola, Inc. | Fast handover through proactive registration |
JP4584835B2 (en) | 2003-08-13 | 2010-11-24 | クゥアルコム・インコーポレイテッド | Power control method and apparatus in wireless communication system |
KR101225170B1 (en) | 2003-08-20 | 2013-01-22 | 파나소닉 주식회사 | Radio communication apparatus and subcarrier assignment method |
US7733846B2 (en) | 2003-08-26 | 2010-06-08 | Alcatel-Lucent Usa Inc. | Method and control channel for uplink signaling in a communication system |
KR100689543B1 (en) | 2003-08-26 | 2007-03-02 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method and apparatus for requesting scheduling of uplink packet transmission in a mobile telecommunication system |
KR100500878B1 (en) | 2003-08-27 | 2005-07-14 | 한국전자통신연구원 | Method of packet scheduling with power |
KR101000391B1 (en) | 2003-09-01 | 2010-12-13 | 엘지전자 주식회사 | method of controlling data rate over reverse link |
US20050053099A1 (en) | 2003-09-05 | 2005-03-10 | Spear Stephen L. | Timing advance determinations in wireless communications devices and methods |
ATE506822T1 (en) | 2003-09-23 | 2011-05-15 | Panasonic Corp | PROTOCOL CONTEXT TRANSMISSION IN A MOBILE RADIO COMMUNICATION SYSTEM |
US7590099B2 (en) | 2003-09-25 | 2009-09-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Managing traffic in communications system having dissimilar CDMA channels |
US20050164709A1 (en) | 2003-09-30 | 2005-07-28 | Srinivasan Balasubramanian | Method and apparatus for congestion control in high speed wireless packet data networks |
GB0323246D0 (en) | 2003-10-03 | 2003-11-05 | Fujitsu Ltd | Virtually centralized uplink scheduling |
GB0323245D0 (en) | 2003-10-03 | 2003-11-05 | Fujitsu Ltd | Soft handover techniques |
US7317917B2 (en) | 2003-10-14 | 2008-01-08 | Via Telecom, Inc. | Mobile station connection management utilizing suitable parameter information |
US8284752B2 (en) | 2003-10-15 | 2012-10-09 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method, apparatus, and system for medium access control |
US8233462B2 (en) | 2003-10-15 | 2012-07-31 | Qualcomm Incorporated | High speed media access control and direct link protocol |
EP1524804A1 (en) | 2003-10-17 | 2005-04-20 | Alcatel | A method of providing packetized data from a radio network controller to a base station |
KR100505969B1 (en) | 2003-10-24 | 2005-08-30 | 한국전자통신연구원 | A packet scheduling system and a method of mobile telecommunication system |
WO2005046125A1 (en) | 2003-10-28 | 2005-05-19 | Docomo Communications Laboratories Usa, Inc. | Method for supporting scalable and reliable multicast in tdma/tdd systems using feedback suppression techniques |
JP2005136773A (en) | 2003-10-31 | 2005-05-26 | Sony Ericsson Mobilecommunications Japan Inc | Radio transmission system, transmission side device, and reception side device |
DE10350894B4 (en) | 2003-10-31 | 2006-09-28 | Siemens Ag | Method for transmitting data |
CN1879440A (en) | 2003-11-07 | 2006-12-13 | 三菱电机株式会社 | Mobile station, communication system, communication control method |
KR100651430B1 (en) | 2003-11-07 | 2006-11-28 | 삼성전자주식회사 | System and method for handover in a communication system |
JP2005142965A (en) | 2003-11-07 | 2005-06-02 | Sharp Corp | Communication apparatus, communication method, communication program, and recording medium with communication program recorded thereon |
US7558235B2 (en) | 2003-11-07 | 2009-07-07 | Motorola, Inc. | Method for efficient bandwidth utilization in a wireless radio network |
CN100388675C (en) | 2003-11-13 | 2008-05-14 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | A method for implementing foreground data configuration in network management system |
US7706403B2 (en) | 2003-11-25 | 2010-04-27 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Queuing delay based rate control |
US8406235B2 (en) | 2003-11-26 | 2013-03-26 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Quality of service scheduler for a wireless network |
US7139536B2 (en) | 2003-12-02 | 2006-11-21 | Mediatek Inc. | Method and apparatus for I/Q imbalance calibration of a transmitter system |
US7047009B2 (en) | 2003-12-05 | 2006-05-16 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Base station based methods and apparatus for supporting break before make handoffs in a multi-carrier system |
US7212821B2 (en) | 2003-12-05 | 2007-05-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for performing handoffs in a multi-carrier wireless communications system |
KR100770842B1 (en) | 2003-12-10 | 2007-10-26 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Apparatus and method for transmitting reverse channel information of mobile terminal in a wireless communication system |
US7751367B2 (en) | 2003-12-11 | 2010-07-06 | Qualcomm, Inc. | Conveying sector load information to mobile stations |
WO2005060132A1 (en) | 2003-12-18 | 2005-06-30 | Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute | Method and apparatus for requesting and reporting channel quality information in mobile communication system |
GB0329312D0 (en) | 2003-12-18 | 2004-01-21 | Univ Durham | Mapping perceived depth to regions of interest in stereoscopic images |
US7599698B2 (en) | 2003-12-29 | 2009-10-06 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Network controlled channel information reporting |
WO2005065056A2 (en) | 2004-01-02 | 2005-07-21 | Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute | A method for traffic indication and channel adaptation for the sleep mode terminals, and an apparatus thereof |
KR100592412B1 (en) | 2004-01-05 | 2006-06-22 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Access network device that manages queue considering real-time traffic characteristics and method of managing the queue |
MXPA06007826A (en) | 2004-01-08 | 2006-09-01 | Interdigital Tech Corp | Wireless communication method and apparatus for optimizing the performance of access points. |
US20050152320A1 (en) | 2004-01-08 | 2005-07-14 | Interdigital Technology Corporation | Wireless communication method and apparatus for balancing the loads of access points by controlling access point transmission power levels |
US7215655B2 (en) | 2004-01-09 | 2007-05-08 | Interdigital Technology Corporation | Transport format combination selection in a wireless transmit/receive unit |
KR100608844B1 (en) | 2004-01-09 | 2006-08-08 | 엘지전자 주식회사 | RADIO COMMUNICATION SYSTEM PROVIDING VoIP SERVICE |
KR100866237B1 (en) | 2004-01-20 | 2008-10-30 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Apparatus and method for deciding modulation degree and receiving data in a high rate data wireless communication |
KR100871263B1 (en) | 2004-01-20 | 2008-11-28 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method for transmitting/receiving protection multimedia broadcast/multicast service data packet in a mobile communication system serving multimedia broadcast/multicast service |
US20050170782A1 (en) | 2004-02-04 | 2005-08-04 | Nokia Corporation | Method and apparatus to compensate quantization error of channel quality report |
KR20050081528A (en) | 2004-02-14 | 2005-08-19 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Channel state information feedback method for multi-carrier communication system |
KR100713442B1 (en) | 2004-02-14 | 2007-05-02 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method of transmitting scheduling information an enhanced uplink dedicated channel in a mobile communication system |
US20050181732A1 (en) | 2004-02-18 | 2005-08-18 | Kang Joseph H. | Method and apparatus for determining at least an indication of return loss of an antenna |
US7376122B2 (en) | 2004-02-23 | 2008-05-20 | Microsoft Corporation | System and method for link quality source routing |
KR20060132918A (en) | 2004-02-26 | 2006-12-22 | 마쓰시다 일렉트릭 인더스트리얼 컴패니 리미티드 | Mobile station device and transmission antenna selection method in the mobile station device |
US7512185B2 (en) | 2004-03-08 | 2009-03-31 | Infineon Technologies Ag | Dual carrier modulator for a multiband OFDM UWB transceiver |
JP4022625B2 (en) | 2004-03-08 | 2007-12-19 | 独立行政法人情報通信研究機構 | Communication system, communication method, base station, and mobile station |
US8243633B2 (en) | 2004-03-16 | 2012-08-14 | Nokia Corporation | Enhanced uplink dedicated channel—application protocol over lub/lur |
US7859985B2 (en) | 2004-03-22 | 2010-12-28 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | Control on at least one frequency selecting data carrier frequencies |
US7161909B2 (en) | 2004-04-23 | 2007-01-09 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Method and system for acknowledging the receipt of a transmitted data stream in a wireless communication system |
US7835454B2 (en) * | 2004-04-30 | 2010-11-16 | Analog Devices, B.V. | Multicarrier modulation systems |
ES2298696T3 (en) | 2004-05-04 | 2008-05-16 | Alcatel Lucent | METHOD OF COORDINATION OF INTER-CELL INTERFERENCE WITH POWER PLANNING IN A OFDM MOBILE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM. |
MXPA06012747A (en) | 2004-05-05 | 2007-02-19 | Qualcomm Inc | Method and apparatus for adaptive delay management in a wireless communication system. |
US7747275B2 (en) | 2004-05-06 | 2010-06-29 | M-Stack Limited | Cell selection in mobile communications |
US7643419B2 (en) | 2004-05-07 | 2010-01-05 | Interdigital Technology Corporation | Method and apparatus for implementing a data lifespan timer for enhanced dedicated channel transmissions |
US7034254B2 (en) | 2004-05-11 | 2006-04-25 | The Scott Fetzer Company | Heated delivery system |
KR100678184B1 (en) | 2004-05-19 | 2007-02-02 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method and?apparatus?for scheduling of enhanced uplink dedicated channel in a mobile telecommunication system |
KR100965694B1 (en) | 2004-06-15 | 2010-06-24 | 삼성전자주식회사 | System and method for supporting soft handover in a broadband wireless access communication system |
KR100713394B1 (en) | 2004-06-16 | 2007-05-04 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method and apparatus for reordering uplink data packets in mobile telecommunication system using transmission sequence number and time stamp |
US7620417B2 (en) | 2004-06-18 | 2009-11-17 | Panasonic Corporation | Communication terminal apparatus, scheduling method, and transmission power deriving method |
US8452316B2 (en) | 2004-06-18 | 2013-05-28 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Power control for a wireless communication system utilizing orthogonal multiplexing |
US20060015357A1 (en) | 2004-07-16 | 2006-01-19 | First American Real Estate Solutions, L.P. | Method and apparatus for spatiotemporal valuation of real estate |
WO2006020636A2 (en) | 2004-08-10 | 2006-02-23 | Nextel Communications, Inc. | System and method for handoff between base stations |
JP4440037B2 (en) | 2004-08-11 | 2010-03-24 | 株式会社東芝 | Communication apparatus and communication method |
US7668085B2 (en) | 2004-08-27 | 2010-02-23 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Common rate control command generation |
EP1788828A4 (en) | 2004-09-08 | 2011-02-23 | Mitsubishi Electric Corp | Mobile station, base station, communication system, and communication method |
GB2418105A (en) | 2004-09-13 | 2006-03-15 | Fujitsu Ltd | Relative indicators used for scheduling of uplink transmissions |
US7356635B2 (en) | 2004-09-24 | 2008-04-08 | Cypress Semiconductor Corp. | Compressed report descriptors for USB devices |
WO2006038786A1 (en) | 2004-10-07 | 2006-04-13 | Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. | Apparatus and method for measuring and reporting uplink load in a cellular mobile communication system |
NZ555079A (en) | 2004-10-14 | 2010-04-30 | Qualcomm Inc | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control purposes |
US20060092881A1 (en) | 2004-10-14 | 2006-05-04 | Rajiv Laroia | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control purposes |
US8503938B2 (en) | 2004-10-14 | 2013-08-06 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information including loading factors which can be used for interference control purposes |
JP2008517551A (en) | 2004-10-19 | 2008-05-22 | サムスン エレクトロニクス カンパニー リミテッド | Terminal state information signaling method and apparatus for uplink data transmission in a mobile communication system |
US20060089104A1 (en) | 2004-10-27 | 2006-04-27 | Nokia Corporation | Method for improving an HS-DSCH transport format allocation |
US7421260B2 (en) * | 2004-10-29 | 2008-09-02 | Broadcom Corporation | Method and system for a second order input intercept point (IIP2) correction |
KR101141649B1 (en) | 2004-11-09 | 2012-05-17 | 엘지전자 주식회사 | method of transmitting and receiving control information for enhanced uplink data channel |
US20060104240A1 (en) | 2004-11-12 | 2006-05-18 | Benoist Sebire | Trigger for sending scheduling information in HSUPA |
KR100576834B1 (en) | 2004-11-23 | 2006-05-10 | 삼성전자주식회사 | Method for re-transmitting packet of wireless lan system based polling |
US7474627B2 (en) | 2004-12-17 | 2009-01-06 | Nortel Networks Limited | Voice over internet protocol (VoIP) call admission and call regulation in a wireless network |
US7242956B2 (en) | 2004-12-20 | 2007-07-10 | Motorola, Inc. | Rapid channel quality based power control for high speed channels |
US7430420B2 (en) | 2004-12-23 | 2008-09-30 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Cell selection and inter-frequency handover |
GB0500588D0 (en) | 2005-01-12 | 2005-02-16 | Koninkl Philips Electronics Nv | Method of, and apparatus for, scheduling the transmission of data units in a communication system |
TWI382713B (en) | 2005-01-21 | 2013-01-11 | Koninkl Philips Electronics Nv | Measuring and monitoring qos in service differentiated wireless networks |
US7796505B2 (en) | 2005-01-26 | 2010-09-14 | M-Stack Limited | Method for processing traffic data in a wireless communications system |
US7430207B2 (en) | 2005-02-07 | 2008-09-30 | Reti Corporation | Preemptive weighted round robin scheduler |
US7974253B2 (en) | 2005-03-08 | 2011-07-05 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for implementing and using a rate indicator |
US8306541B2 (en) | 2005-03-08 | 2012-11-06 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Data rate methods and apparatus |
US7826807B2 (en) | 2005-03-09 | 2010-11-02 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for antenna control in a wireless terminal |
US7525971B2 (en) | 2005-03-16 | 2009-04-28 | Alcatel-Lucent Usa Inc. | Software-hardware partitioning of a scheduled medium-access protocol |
US20060215604A1 (en) | 2005-03-24 | 2006-09-28 | Jens Mueckenheim | Scheduling method for enhanced uplink channels |
US7317921B2 (en) | 2005-04-19 | 2008-01-08 | Lucent Technologies Inc. | Responding to changes in measurement of system load in spread spectrum communication systems |
KR100963660B1 (en) | 2005-04-29 | 2010-06-15 | 노키아 코포레이션 | Method, apparatus and computer program to dynamically adjust segmentation at a protocol layer, such as at the medium access controlMAC layer |
WO2006120526A2 (en) * | 2005-05-11 | 2006-11-16 | Nokia Corporation | Method, apparatus and computer program product to provide enhanced reverse link medium access control in a multi-carrier wireless communications system |
US7269406B2 (en) | 2005-05-26 | 2007-09-11 | Intel Corporation | Methods and apparatus for providing information indicative of traffic delay of a wireless link |
US7403470B2 (en) | 2005-06-13 | 2008-07-22 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Communications system, methods and apparatus |
HUE042367T2 (en) | 2005-06-16 | 2019-06-28 | Qualcomm Inc | Negotiated channel information reporting in a wireless communication system |
US7519013B2 (en) | 2005-06-30 | 2009-04-14 | Nokia Corporation | Spatial reuse in a wireless communications network |
US7539475B2 (en) | 2005-07-08 | 2009-05-26 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Wireless terminal methods and apparatus for DC tone special treatment |
US7929499B2 (en) | 2005-07-13 | 2011-04-19 | Alcatel-Lucent Usa Inc. | Methods of multipath acquisition for dedicated traffic channels |
JP4150388B2 (en) | 2005-07-19 | 2008-09-17 | 松下電器産業株式会社 | Wireless transmission device and guard frequency band setting method |
US7457588B2 (en) | 2005-08-01 | 2008-11-25 | Motorola, Inc. | Channel quality indicator for time, frequency and spatial channel in terrestrial radio access network |
EP1911217B1 (en) | 2005-08-05 | 2014-09-24 | Nokia Corporation | Coordinating uplink control channel transmission with channel quality indicator reporting |
US7463892B2 (en) | 2005-08-12 | 2008-12-09 | Toshiba America Research, Inc. | Latency-aware service opportunity window-based (LASO) scheduling |
US7450130B2 (en) | 2005-09-14 | 2008-11-11 | Microsoft Corporation | Adaptive scheduling to maintain smooth frame rate |
US20080219201A1 (en) | 2005-09-16 | 2008-09-11 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. | Method of Clustering Devices in Wireless Communication Network |
US9078084B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-07-07 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for end node assisted neighbor discovery |
US7567791B2 (en) | 2005-09-19 | 2009-07-28 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Wireless terminal methods and apparatus for use in a wireless communications system that uses a multi-mode base station |
US8983468B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-03-17 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Communications methods and apparatus using physical attachment point identifiers |
US20070070894A1 (en) | 2005-09-26 | 2007-03-29 | Fan Wang | Method to determine a scheduling priority value for a user data connection based on a quality of service requirement |
US7953417B2 (en) | 2005-11-04 | 2011-05-31 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for selecting and signaling a preferred link among a plurality of maintained wireless communications links |
US8989084B2 (en) | 2005-10-14 | 2015-03-24 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for broadcasting loading information corresponding to neighboring base stations |
US9191840B2 (en) | 2005-10-14 | 2015-11-17 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control |
US8396141B2 (en) | 2005-11-29 | 2013-03-12 | Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson (Publ) | Efficient cell selection |
US7593384B2 (en) | 2005-12-15 | 2009-09-22 | Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) | Efficient channel quality reporting and link adaptation for multi-carrier broadband wireless communication |
US7558572B2 (en) | 2005-12-21 | 2009-07-07 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for determining and/or communicating parameter switching point information in wireless communications systems including wireless terminals supporting multiple wireless connections |
US8514771B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2013-08-20 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating and/or using transmission power information |
US9119220B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-08-25 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating backlog related information |
US9451491B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-09-20 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus relating to generating and transmitting initial and additional control information report sets in a wireless system |
US8437251B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2013-05-07 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating transmission backlog information |
US9148795B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-29 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for flexible reporting of control information |
US20070149132A1 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2007-06-28 | Junyl Li | Methods and apparatus related to selecting control channel reporting formats |
US9125092B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for reporting and/or using control information |
US9125093B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-01 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus related to custom control channel reporting formats |
US9572179B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2017-02-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating transmission backlog information |
US9137072B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2015-09-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating control information |
US9338767B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-05-10 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus of implementing and/or using a dedicated control channel |
US20070249360A1 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2007-10-25 | Arnab Das | Methods and aparatus related to determining, communicating, and/or using delay information in a wireless communications system |
US9473265B2 (en) | 2005-12-22 | 2016-10-18 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Methods and apparatus for communicating information utilizing a plurality of dictionaries |
JP4716907B2 (en) | 2006-03-28 | 2011-07-06 | 富士通株式会社 | Subband notification method and terminal device |
US20070243882A1 (en) | 2006-04-12 | 2007-10-18 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for locating a wireless local area network associated with a wireless wide area network |
US8121552B2 (en) | 2006-09-05 | 2012-02-21 | Motorola Mobility, Inc. | Method and apparatus for providing channel quality feedback in a wireless communication system |
US7743284B1 (en) | 2007-04-27 | 2010-06-22 | Netapp, Inc. | Method and apparatus for reporting storage device and storage system data |
US8185716B2 (en) | 2007-10-22 | 2012-05-22 | Qimonda Ag | Memory system and method for using a memory system with virtual address translation capabilities |
-
2006
- 2006-01-17 US US11/333,788 patent/US8811348B2/en active Active
- 2006-12-20 CN CN201510264503.4A patent/CN104811996A/en active Pending
- 2006-12-20 EP EP06845864A patent/EP1969890A2/en not_active Ceased
- 2006-12-20 KR KR1020087018014A patent/KR101030199B1/en active IP Right Grant
- 2006-12-20 JP JP2008547461A patent/JP5096368B2/en active Active
- 2006-12-20 EP EP10175460A patent/EP2252102A1/en not_active Withdrawn
- 2006-12-20 WO PCT/US2006/048513 patent/WO2007075736A2/en active Application Filing
- 2006-12-21 TW TW095148272A patent/TW200742291A/en unknown
Patent Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2004077685A2 (en) * | 2003-02-24 | 2004-09-10 | Flarion Technologies, Inc. | Pilot signals for use in multi-sector cells |
WO2004100450A1 (en) * | 2003-05-09 | 2004-11-18 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. | System and method for measurement report time stamping to ensure reference time correctness |
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US11129062B2 (en) | 2004-08-04 | 2021-09-21 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Enhanced techniques for using core based nodes for state transfer |
US8982778B2 (en) | 2005-09-19 | 2015-03-17 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Packet routing in a wireless communications environment |
US9369885B2 (en) | 2011-04-12 | 2016-06-14 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for selecting reference signal tones for decoding a channel |
US9497645B2 (en) | 2011-04-12 | 2016-11-15 | Qualcomm Incorporated | Method and apparatus for selecting reference signal tones for decoding a channel |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
WO2007075736A3 (en) | 2008-05-29 |
JP2009521849A (en) | 2009-06-04 |
CN104811996A (en) | 2015-07-29 |
KR101030199B1 (en) | 2011-04-22 |
US20140134953A9 (en) | 2014-05-15 |
US20070149126A1 (en) | 2007-06-28 |
EP1969890A2 (en) | 2008-09-17 |
JP5096368B2 (en) | 2012-12-12 |
EP2252102A1 (en) | 2010-11-17 |
US8811348B2 (en) | 2014-08-19 |
KR20080089428A (en) | 2008-10-06 |
TW200742291A (en) | 2007-11-01 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US8811348B2 (en) | Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise | |
KR101026590B1 (en) | Method and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information including loading factors for interference control | |
US7853281B2 (en) | Methods and apparatus for tracking wireless terminal power information | |
US7936831B2 (en) | Methods and apparatus for implementing and using an in-band rate indicator | |
KR100970086B1 (en) | Method and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information including loading factors for interference control | |
CN101341784A (en) | Methods and apparatus for generating, communicating, and/or using information relating to self-noise | |
EP1856831B1 (en) | Methods and apparatuses for data rate adaptation | |
US8452294B2 (en) | In-band ate indicator methods and apparatus | |
JP4927874B2 (en) | Multi-symbol signal including opening symbol and extension | |
US7974352B2 (en) | Wireless transmitter, wireless receiver and wireless communication system | |
NZ584977A (en) | Serving Base Station Selection in a Wireless Communication System | |
KR20100072187A (en) | Method and apparatus for transmit power calibration in a frequency division multiplexed wireless system | |
CN101610104A (en) | The power distribution method of user dedicated reference symbols and equipment | |
KR20090077821A (en) | Methods and apparatus for determining, communicating and using information which can be used for interference control purposes | |
CN102571232A (en) | Method and apparatus for determining, transmitting and using load factors for interference control |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 200680048124.0 Country of ref document: CN |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 2006845864 Country of ref document: EP |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 5097/DELNP/2008 Country of ref document: IN |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 2008547461 Country of ref document: JP |
|
NENP | Non-entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: DE |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 1020087018014 Country of ref document: KR |
|
121 | Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application |
Ref document number: 06845864 Country of ref document: EP Kind code of ref document: A2 |