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Motorola (United States)

companySchaumburg, Illinois, United States

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Motorola (United States) (United States). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
13.3K
Citations
634.5K
h-index
265
i10-index
10.7K
Also known as
Galvin Manufacturing CorporationMotorola (United States)

Top-cited papers from Motorola (United States)

Overview of the H.264/AVC video coding standard
Thomas Wiegand, Gary J. Sullivan, Gisle Bjøntegaard, Ajay Luthra
2003· IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology8.1Kdoi:10.1109/tcsvt.2003.815165

H.264/AVC is newest video coding standard of the ITU-T Video Coding Experts Group and the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group. The main goals of the H.264/AVC standardization effort have been enhanced compression performance and provision of a "network-friendly" video representation addressing "conversational" (video telephony) and "nonconversational" (storage, broadcast, or streaming) applications. H.264/AVC has achieved a significant improvement in rate-distortion efficiency relative to existing standards. This article provides an overview of the technical features of H.264/AVC, describes profiles and applications for the standard, and outlines the history of the standardization process.

The Genome Sequence of <i>Drosophila melanogaster</i>
Mark D. Adams, S Celniker, Robert A. Holt, Cheryl Evans +4 more
2000· Science6.0Kdoi:10.1126/science.287.5461.2185

The fly Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most intensively studied organisms in biology and serves as a model system for the investigation of many developmental and cellular processes common to higher eukaryotes, including humans. We have determined the nucleotide sequence of nearly all of the approximately 120-megabase euchromatic portion of the Drosophila genome using a whole-genome shotgun sequencing strategy supported by extensive clone-based sequence and a high-quality bacterial artificial chromosome physical map. Efforts are under way to close the remaining gaps; however, the sequence is of sufficient accuracy and contiguity to be declared substantially complete and to support an initial analysis of genome structure and preliminary gene annotation and interpretation. The genome encodes approximately 13,600 genes, somewhat fewer than the smaller Caenorhabditis elegans genome, but with comparable functional diversity.

Locating the nodes: cooperative localization in wireless sensor networks
Neal Patwari, Joshua N. Ash, Spyros Kyperountas, Alfred O. Hero +2 more
2005· IEEE Signal Processing Magazine3.0Kdoi:10.1109/msp.2005.1458287

Accurate and low-cost sensor localization is a critical requirement for the deployment of wireless sensor networks in a wide variety of applications. In cooperative localization, sensors work together in a peer-to-peer manner to make measurements and then forms a map of the network. Various application requirements influence the design of sensor localization systems. In this article, the authors describe the measurement-based statistical models useful to describe time-of-arrival (TOA), angle-of-arrival (AOA), and received-signal-strength (RSS) measurements in wireless sensor networks. Wideband and ultra-wideband (UWB) measurements, and RF and acoustic media are also discussed. Using the models, the authors have shown the calculation of a Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) on the location estimation precision possible for a given set of measurements. The article briefly surveys a large and growing body of sensor localization algorithms. This article is intended to emphasize the basic statistical signal processing background necessary to understand the state-of-the-art and to make progress in the new and largely open areas of sensor network localization research.

Genetic algorithms: a survey
M. Srinivas, L.M. Patnaik
1994· Computer2.2Kdoi:10.1109/2.294849

Genetic algorithms provide an alternative to traditional optimization techniques by using directed random searches to locate optimal solutions in complex landscapes. We introduce the art and science of genetic algorithms and survey current issues in GA theory and practice. We do not present a detailed study, instead, we offer a quick guide into the labyrinth of GA research. First, we draw the analogy between genetic algorithms and the search processes in nature. Then we describe the genetic algorithm that Holland introduced in 1975 and the workings of GAs. After a survey of techniques proposed as improvements to Holland's GA and of some radically different approaches, we survey the advances in GA theory related to modeling, dynamics, and deception.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

Relative location estimation in wireless sensor networks
Neal Patwari, Alfred O. Hero, Matt Perkins, N.S. Correal +1 more
2003· IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing1.9Kdoi:10.1109/tsp.2003.814469

Self-configuration in wireless sensor networks is a general class of estimation problems that we study via the Cramer-Rao bound (CRB). Specifically, we consider sensor location estimation when sensors measure received signal strength (RSS) or time-of-arrival (TOA) between themselves and neighboring sensors. A small fraction of sensors in the network have a known location, whereas the remaining locations must be estimated. We derive CRBs and maximum-likelihood estimators (MLEs) under Gaussian and log-normal models for the TOA and RSS measurements, respectively. An extensive TOA and RSS measurement campaign in an indoor office area illustrates MLE performance. Finally, relative location estimation algorithms are implemented in a wireless sensor network testbed and deployed in indoor and outdoor environments. The measurements and testbed experiments demonstrate 1-m RMS location errors using TOA, and 1- to 2-m RMS location errors using RSS.

Examining smart-card security under the threat of power analysis attacks
Thomas S. Messerges, Ezzy A. Dabbish, Robert H. Sloan
2002· IEEE Transactions on Computers1.7Kdoi:10.1109/tc.2002.1004593

This paper examines how monitoring power consumption signals might breach smart-card security. Both simple power analysis and differential power analysis attacks are investigated. The theory behind these attacks is reviewed. Then, we concentrate on showing how power analysis theory can be applied to attack an actual smart card. We examine the noise characteristics of the power signals and develop an approach to model the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). We show how this SNR can be significantly improved using a multiple-bit attack. Experimental results against a smart-card implementation of the Data Encryption Standard demonstrate the effectiveness of our multiple-bit attack. Potential countermeasures to these attacks are also discussed.

Digital image restoration
M.R. Banham, Aggelos K. Katsaggelos
1997· IEEE Signal Processing Magazine1.7Kdoi:10.1109/79.581363

The article introduces digital image restoration to the reader who is just beginning in this field, and provides a review and analysis for the reader who may already be well-versed in image restoration. The perspective on the topic is one that comes primarily from work done in the field of signal processing. Thus, many of the techniques and works cited relate to classical signal processing approaches to estimation theory, filtering, and numerical analysis. In particular, the emphasis is placed primarily on digital image restoration algorithms that grow out of an area known as "regularized least squares" methods. It should be noted, however, that digital image restoration is a very broad field, as we discuss, and thus contains many other successful approaches that have been developed from different perspectives, such as optics, astronomy, and medical imaging, just to name a few. In the process of reviewing this topic, we address a number of very important issues in this field that are not typically discussed in the technical literature.

Electromigration&amp;#8212;A brief survey and some recent results
J. R. Black
1969· IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices1.4Kdoi:10.1109/t-ed.1969.16754

Recently, electromigration has been identified as a potential wear-out failure mode for semiconductor devices employing metal film conductors of inadequate cross-sectional area. A brief survey of electromigration indicates that although the effect has been known for several decades, a great deal of the processes involved is still unknown, especially for complex metals and solute ions. Earlier design equations are improved to account for conductor film cross-sectional area as well as film structure, film temperature, and current density. Design curves are presented which permit the construction of high reliability "infinite life" aluminum conductors for specific conditions of maximum current and temperature stress expected in use. It is also shown that positive gradients, in terms of electron flow, of temperature, current density, or ion diffusion coefficient foreshorten conductor life because they present regions where vacancies condense to form voids.

Reproducible Measurement of Single-Molecule Conductivity
Xiaodong Cui, Alex Primak, Xristo Zárate, John K. Tomfohr +4 more
2001· Science1.3Kdoi:10.1126/science.1064354

A reliable method has been developed for making through-bond electrical contacts to molecules. Current-voltage curves are quantized as integer multiples of one fundamental curve, an observation used to identify single-molecule contacts. The resistance of a single octanedithiol molecule was 900 +/- 50 megohms, based on measurements on more than 1000 single molecules. In contrast, nonbonded contacts to octanethiol monolayers were at least four orders of magnitude more resistive, less reproducible, and had a different voltage dependence, demonstrating that the measurement of intrinsic molecular properties requires chemically bonded contacts.

Titanium nitride oxidation chemistry: An x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy study
Naresh C. Saha, Harland G. Tompkins
1992· Journal of Applied Physics1.2Kdoi:10.1063/1.351465

We report a study of the oxidation of TiN. In previous work, the oxidation kinetics for 350–450 °C were reported and an initiation time prior to fast oxidation was identified. In this study, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to investigate the oxidation mechanisms at 350 °C during this initiation time period. The oxide thickness increases slowly with oxidation time and the film appears to change from an amorphous TiO2 layer to a crystalline TiO2 layer. Spectral features which are intermediate between TiO2 and TiN are reported and a model involving grain boundary oxidation is proposed. One of the thicker oxides studied was annealed in vacuum to 700 °C. Following oxidation, some of the capping oxide and much of the intermediate material is no longer in the analysis volume and we suggest that the oxygen and nitrogen is being dissolved into the bulk in much the same way that nonevaporable getters are activated before use.

Ellipsometric determination of optical constants for silicon and thermally grown silicon dioxide via a multi-sample, multi-wavelength, multi-angle investigation
Craig M. Herzinger, Blaine Johs, William A. McGahan, John A. Woollam +1 more
1998· Journal of Applied Physics1.1Kdoi:10.1063/1.367101

Optical constant spectra for silicon and thermally grown silicon dioxide have been simultaneously determined using variable angle of incidence spectroscopic ellipsometry from 0.75 to 6.5 eV. Spectroscopic ellipsometric data sets acquired at multiple angles of incidence from seven samples with oxide thicknesses from 2 to 350 nm were analyzed using a self-contained multi-sample technique to obtain Kramers–Kronig consistent optical constant spectra. The investigation used a systematic approach utilizing optical models of increasing complexity in order to investigate the need for fitting the thermal SiO2 optical constants and including an interface layer between the silicon and SiO2 in modeling the data. A detailed study was made of parameter correlation effects involving the optical constants used for the interface layer. The resulting thermal silicon dioxide optical constants were shown to be independent of the precise substrate model used, and were found to be approximately 0.4% higher in index than published values for bulk glasseous SiO2. The resulting silicon optical constants are comparable to previous ellipsometric measurements in the regions of overlap, and are in agreement with long wavelength prism measurements and transmission measurements near the band gap.

LTE-advanced: next-generation wireless broadband technology [Invited Paper
Amitava Ghosh, Rapeepat Ratasuk, Bishwarup Mondal, Nitin Mangalvedhe +1 more
2010· IEEE Wireless Communications955doi:10.1109/mwc.2010.5490974

LTE Release 8 is one of the primary broadband technologies based on OFDM, which is currently being commercialized. LTE Release 8, which is mainly deployed in a macro/microcell layout, provides improved system capacity and coverage, high peak data rates, low latency, reduced operating costs, multi-antenna support, flexible bandwidth operation and seamless integration with existing systems. LTE-Advanced (also known as LTE Release 10) significantly enhances the existing LTE Release 8 and supports much higher peak rates, higher throughput and coverage, and lower latencies, resulting in a better user experience. Additionally, LTE Release 10 will support heterogeneous deployments where low-power nodes comprising picocells, femtocells, relays, remote radio heads, and so on are placed in a macrocell layout. The LTE-Advanced features enable one to meet or exceed IMT-Advanced requirements. It may also be noted that LTE Release 9 provides some minor enhancement to LTE Release 8 with respect to the air interface, and includes features like dual-layer beamforming and time-difference- of-arrival-based location techniques. In this article an overview of the techniques being considered for LTE Release 10 (aka LTEAdvanced) is discussed. This includes bandwidth extension via carrier aggregation to support deployment bandwidths up to 100 MHz, downlink spatial multiplexing including single-cell multi-user multiple-input multiple-output transmission and coordinated multi point transmission, uplink spatial multiplexing including extension to four-layer MIMO, and heterogeneous networks with emphasis on Type 1 and Type 2 relays. Finally, the performance of LTEAdvanced using IMT-A scenarios is presented and compared against IMT-A targets for full buffer and bursty traffic model.

Efficient and Robust Feature Extraction by Maximum Margin Criterion
Haizhou Li, Tao Jiang, Kai Zhang
2006· IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks849doi:10.1109/tnn.2005.860852

In pattern recognition, feature extraction techniques are widely employed to reduce the dimensionality of data and to enhance the discriminatory information. Principal component analysis (PCA) and linear discriminant analysis (LDA) are the two most popular linear dimensionality reduction methods. However, PCA is not very effective for the extraction of the most discriminant features, and LDA is not stable due to the small sample size problem. In this paper, we propose some new (linear and nonlinear) feature extractors based on maximum margin criterion (MMC). Geometrically, feature extractors based on MMC maximize the (average) margin between classes after dimensionality reduction. It is shown that MMC can represent class separability better than PCA. As a connection to LDA, we may also derive LDA from MMC by incorporating some constraints. By using some other constraints, we establish a new linear feature extractor that does not suffer from the small sample size problem, which is known to cause serious stability problems for LDA. The kernelized (nonlinear) counterpart of this linear feature extractor is also established in the paper. Our extensive experiments demonstrate that the new feature extractors are effective, stable, and efficient.

Combined differential and common-mode scattering parameters: theory and simulation
D.E. Bockelman, W.R. Eisenstadt
1995· IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques793doi:10.1109/22.392911

A theory for combined differential and common-mode normalized power waves is developed in terms of even and odd mode impedances and propagation constants for a microwave coupled line system. These are related to even and odd-mode terminal currents and voltages. Generalized s-parameters of a two-port are developed for waves propagating in several coupled modes. The two-port s-parameters form a 4-by-4 matrix containing differential-mode, common-mode, and cross-mode s-parameters. A special case of the theory allows the use of uncoupled transmission lines to measure the coupled-mode waves. Simulations verify the concept of these mixed-mode s-parameters, and demonstrate conversion from mode to mode for asymmetric microwave structures.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

Efficient use of side information in multiple-antenna data transmission over fading channels
Aradhana Narula, Michael J. Lopez, M.D. Trott, Gregory W. Wornell
1998· IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications757doi:10.1109/49.730451

We derive performance limits for two closely related communication scenarios involving a wireless system with multiple-element transmitter antenna arrays: a point-to-point system with partial side information at the transmitter, and a broadcast system with multiple receivers. In both cases, ideal beamforming is impossible, leading to an inherently lower achievable performance as the quality of the side information degrades or as the number of receivers increases. Expected signal-tonoise ratio (SNR) and mutual information are both considered as performance measures. In the point-to-point case, we determine when the transmission strategy should use some form of beamforming and when it should not. We also show that, when properly chosen, even a small amount of side information can be quite valuable. For the broadcast scenario with an SNR criterion, we find the efficient frontier of operating points and show that even when the number of receivers is larger than the number of antenna array ...

Multiproject Scheduling with Limited Resources: A Zero-One Programming Approach
A. Alan B. Pritsker, Lawrence J. Waiters, Philip M. Wolfe
1969· Management Science747doi:10.1287/mnsc.16.1.93

A zero-one (0-1) linear programming formulation of multiproject and job-shop scheduling problems is presented that is more general and computationally tractable than other known formulations. It can accommodate a wide range of real-world situations including multiple resource constraints, due dates, job splitting, resource, substitutability, and concurrency and nonconcurrency of job performance requirements. Three possible objective functions are discussed; minimizing total throughput time for all projects: minimizing the time by which all projects are completed (i.e., minimizing makespan); and minimizing total lateness or lateness penalty for all projects.

Coordinated multipoint transmission and reception in LTE-advanced: deployment scenarios and operational challenges
Daewon Lee, Hanbyul Seo, Bruno Clerckx, Eric Hardouin +3 more
2012· IEEE Communications Magazine740doi:10.1109/mcom.2012.6146494

3GPP has completed a study on coordinated multipoint transmission and reception techniques to facilitate cooperative communications across multiple transmission and reception points (e.g., cells) for the LTE-Advanced system. In CoMP operation, multiple points coordinate with each other in such a way that the transmission signals from/to other points do not incur serious interference or even can be exploited as a meaningful signal. The goal of the study is to evaluate the potential performance benefits of CoMP techniques and the implementation aspects including the complexity of the standards support for CoMP. This article discusses some of the deployment scenarios in which CoMP techniques will likely be most beneficial and provides an overview of CoMP schemes that might be supported in LTE-Advanced given the modern silicon/DSP technologies and backhaul designs available today. In addition, practical implementation and operational challenges are discussed. We also assess the performance benefits of CoMP in these deployment scenarios with traffic varying from low to high load.

Efficient Modulation for Band-Limited Channels
G. David Forney, Robert G. Gallager, G.R. Lang, F.M. Longstaff +1 more
1984· IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications728doi:10.1109/jsac.1984.1146101

This paper attempts to present a comprehensive tutorial survey of the development of efficient modulation techniques for bandlimited channels, such as telephone channels. After a history of advances in commercial high-speed modems and a discussion of theoretical limits, it reviews efforts to optimize two-dimensional signal constellations and presents further elaborations of uncoded modulation. Its principal emphasis, however, is on coded modulation techniques, in which there is an explosion of current interest, both for research and for practical application. Both block-coded and trellis-coded modulation are covered, in a common framework. A few new techniques are presented.

A Review of Literature on Teaching Engineering Design Through Project‐Oriented Capstone Courses
Alan J. Dutson, Robert H. Todd, Spencer P. Magleby, Carl D. Sorensen
1997· Journal of Engineering Education708doi:10.1002/j.2168-9830.1997.tb00260.x

Abstract Teaching engineering design through senior project or capstone engineering courses has increased in recent years. The trend toward increasing the design component in engineering curricula is part of an effort to better prepare graduates for engineering practice. This paper describes the standard practices and current state of capstone design education throughout the country as revealed through a literature search of over 100 papers relating to engineering design courses. Major topics include the development of capstone design courses, course descriptions, project information, details of industrial involvement, and special aspects of team‐oriented design projects. An extensive list of references is provided.

Electromigration failure modes in aluminum metallization for semiconductor devices
J. R. Black
1969· Proceedings of the IEEE675doi:10.1109/proc.1969.7340

Two wear-out type failure modes involving aluminum metallization for semiconductor devices are described. Both modes involve mass transport by momentum exchange between conducting electrons and metal ions. The first failure mode is the formation of an electrically open circuit due to the condensation of vacancies in the aluminum to form voids. The second is the formation of etch pits into silicon by the dissolution of silicon into aluminum, and the transport of the solute ions down the aluminum conductor away from the silicon-aluminum interface by electron wind forces. The process continues until an etch pit grows into the silicon to a depth sufficient to short out an underlying junction.