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Visitors & Friends > News > Releases > Science > Article
News Releases
August 28,
2003
Media
Contacts: Doug Ramsey, Jacobs
School/CWC, (858) 822-5825
Jill
Laufer, UC Discovery Grants, (510) 642-4221
State
and Industry Partners Invest $3.5 Million in Research at UCSD Center for
Wireless Communications
UC Discovery Grants Fund 8 Projects of Jacobs School of Engineering Faculty
Twenty researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) Jacobs
School of Engineering have won more than $3.5 million in state-funded
UC Discovery Grants and contributions from industry. A total of eight
new projects will be carried out through UCSD's Center for Wireless Communications
(CWC), on topics ranging from multimedia transmission over wireless networks,
to high-bandwidth wireless spaces and "smart" sensor networks.
"These projects reflect the broad range of wireless research we do
here at UCSD, and the support we enjoy among technology corporations and
state funding agencies," said CWC director Lawrence Larson, a professor
of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) in the Jacobs School. "This
new funding is a clear signal that some of the most exciting research
in wireless communications anywhere is being done right here at UCSD --
helping to keep San Diego and California on the cutting edge of this important
industry."
CWC's consortium members are funding the new projects. They include Ericsson,
Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intersil, Nokia, QUALCOMM, Skyworks Solutions, STMicroelectronics,
and Texas Instruments.
The UC Discovery Grants were approved by the University of California's
Industry-University Cooperative Research Program (IUCRP), which was launched
by the State of California in 1996 and which invests up to $60 million
a year in telecommunications and four other fields of science and engineering
(www.ucdiscoverygrant.org) . "The goal is to encourage research at
UC campuses in collaboration with California companies in these critical
technology sectors," said Susanne Huttner, Associate Vice Provost
for Research in the University of California system and Executive Director
of the IUCRP. "These new Discovery Grants underscore our belief that
teaming university researchers, companies, and the State will help California
retain businesses and attract new companies and investments."
All eight projects are two-year programs beginning in August 2003, and
will be carried out by faculty from the Jacobs School's Electrical and
Computer Engineering (ECE) department (except where otherwise noted):
High-Bandwidth Wireless Spaces. Two professors from the Computer Science
and Engineering department -- Joseph Pasquale (lead PI) and Andrew Chien
-- will work with Anthony Acampora, Lawrence Larson and Mohan Trivedi
to investigate system design issues to support high-bandwidth (over 100
megabits per second per user), limited-distance wireless spaces. The goal
is to develop an integrated multi-layer solution topped off with a driving
application based on smart visual environments.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $258,247, Industry Sponsor $359,600; Total
funding: $617,847.
Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output
(MIMO) Wireless Communication Systems. Led by Bhaskar Rao, a team including
Elias Masry, James Zeidler, Truong Nguyen and Rene Cruz will focus on
enhancing the capacity and quality of wireless communication networks
using multiple transmit and receive antennas. The research will examine
important issues in channel estimation and equalization, space-time coding,
and networking.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $227,012, Industry Sponsor $302,400; Total
funding: $529,412.
Low-Power Mixed-Signal
Circuits for Wireless Transceivers. Lead PI Ian Galton and CWC director
Larson will each develop techniques intended to reduce power consumption
in critical high-performance circuit blocks for wireless communication
systems. These include a new way to suppress interference in third-generation
(3G) cellular handset receivers.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $210,944, Industry Sponsor $291,200; Total
funding: $502,144.
Digitally Controlled Transmitters for Next Generation Communications Systems.
CWC director Larson and co-PI Peter Asbeck will develop innovative transmitter
architectures and designs for 3G CDMA wireless linear handset power amplifiers.
Various novel power amplifier approaches will be investigated.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $190,092, Industry Sponsor $253,000; Total
funding: $443,092.
"Smart" Sensor Networks for Visual Context Capture and Interactivity.
Mohan Trivedi will lead this investigation spanning distributed video
capture, transmission and analysis as well as wireless networks. The research
will focus on fundamental issues that arise as multimedia sensors are
deployed over large areas, with varying levels of mobility or access to
power. Co-PIs on the project are Anthony Acampora, Sujit Dey, Truong Nguyen,
Ramesh Rao and Rene Cruz.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $195,927, Industry Sponsor $245,200; Total
funding: $441,127.
Error-Resilient Multimedia Communications for Wireless Channels. Pamela
Cosman is the lead investigator. She and other researchers will conduct
a systematic study of several aspects of multimedia transmission over
noisy channels, with the goal of improving their robustness to errors.
Alon Orlitsky, Alexander Vardy and Kenneth Zeger are co-PIs on the project.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $184,818, Industry Sponsor $252,400; Total
funding: $437,218.
Application and Network-Aware
Multi-Layer Adaptation of Wireless Protocols and Architectures. Lead investigator
Sujit Dey and co-PIs Ramesh Rao and Rene Cruz will focus on ways to exploit
configurability in communication protocols and appliance platform architectures.
The goal: enable wireless applications at low cost (i.e., energy, service
cost and the like) to accommodate future wireless networks and appliances
that will have to support richer and more diverse applications, services
and protocols.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $126,647, Industry Sponsor $175,000; Total
funding: $301,647.
Mobile Orthogonal Frequency Division Modulation (OFDM) Communications.
Most previous studies on OFDM have been for either fixed wireless systems
or pedestrian-speed systems, but this project will build on prior work
done at the Jacobs School on using this technique for systems experiencing
high degrees of mobility (such as Wi-Fi 802.11). Laurence Milstein is
leading this project, with co-PIs Truong Nguyen, John Proakis and James
Zeidler.
Funding: UC Discovery Grant $114,805, Industry Sponsor $152,800; Total
funding: $267,605.
For more information
about the Center for Wireless Communications, go to http://cwc.ucsd.edu/.
A list of previous UC Discovery Grants in communications and networking
is located at http://www.ucdiscoverygrant.org/portfolio/funded/comm.asp.
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