Control Protocol (control + protocol)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Control Protocol

  • transmission control protocol


  • Selected Abstracts


    Performance evaluation of TCP-based applications over DVB-RCS DAMA schemes

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKING, Issue 3 2009
    M. Luglio
    Abstract Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) performance over Digital Video Broadcasting,Return Channel via Satellite (DVB-RCS) standard is greatly affected by the total delay, which is mainly due to two components, propagation delay and access delay. Both are significant because they are dependent on the long propagation path of the satellite link. The former is intrinsic and due to radio wave propagation over the satellite channel for both TCP packets and acknowledgements. It is regulated by the control loop that governs TCP. The latter is due to the control loop that governs the demand assignment multiple access (DAMA) signalling exchange between satellite terminals and the network control center, necessary to manage return link resources. DAMA is adopted in DVB-RCS standard to achieve flexible and efficient use of the shared resources. Therefore, performance of TCP over DVB-RCS may degrade due to the exploitation of two nested control loops also depending on both the selected DAMA algorithm and the traffic profile. This paper analyses the impact of basic DAMA implementation on TCP-based applications over a DVB-RCS link for a large set of study cases. To provide a detailed overview of TCP performance in DVB-RCS environment, the analysis includes both theoretical approach and simulation campaign. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    An architecture for Internet service via broadband satellite networks

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKING, Issue 1 2001
    Vijay G. Bharadwaj
    Abstract High bandwidth satellites offer the promise of a rapidly deployable communications infrastructure with a natural support for mobility. However, many widely used versions of the Transmission Control Protocol perform poorly over satellite links, and this presents an obstacle to the deployment of such systems. We present an architecture that overcomes these problems and allows easy integration of heterogeneous networks into the larger Internet. We also present some results from our initial implementation, which uses TCP connection splitting to improve TCP performance over satellite links. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    A Knowledge,based Algorithm for the Internet Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

    BULLETIN OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH, Issue 1 2002
    Freek Stulp
    Using a knowledge,based approach, the authors derive a protocol for the sequence transmission problem, which provides a high,level model of the Internet transmission control protocol (TCP). The knowledge,based protocol is correct for communication media where deletion and reordering errors may occur. Furthermore, it is shown that both sender and receiver eventually attain depth,n knowledge about the values of the messages for any n, but that common knowledge about the messages is not attainable. [source]


    DS/CDMA throughput of a multi-hop sensor network in a Rayleigh fading underwater acoustic channel

    CONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 8 2007
    Choong Hock Mar
    Abstract Asynchronous half-duplex Direct-Sequence Code-Division Multiple-Access (DS/CDMA) is a suitable candidate for the MAC protocol design of underwater acoustic (UWA) sensor networks owing to its many attractive features. Our ad-hoc multi-hop network is infrastructureless in that it is without centralized base stations or power control. Hence, we develop an asynchronous distributed half-duplex control protocol to regulate between the transmitting and receiving phases of transmissions. Furthermore, multi-hop communications are very sensitive to the time variability of the received signal strength in the fading channel and the ambient noise dominated by snapping shrimp in harsh underwater environments, because a broken link in the multi-hop path is enough to disrupt communications and initiate new route searches. In our configuration, we use the Ad hoc On-demand Distance Vector (AODV) routing protocol optimized for UWA networks. Empirical studies show that we can model the channel as a slow-varying frequency non-selective Rayleigh fading channel. We theoretically analyze the throughput of our configuration by considering three salient features: the ability of the receiver to demodulate the data, the effect of our control protocol and the effect of disconnections on the generation of routing packets. The throughput under various operating conditions is then examined. It is observed that at optimal node separation, the throughput is improved by a factor of 10. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Body Position and Cardiac Dynamic and Chronotropic Responses to Steady-State Isocapnic Hypoxaemia in Humans

    EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2000
    S. Deborah Lucy
    Neural mediation of the human cardiac response to isocapnic (IC) steady-state hypoxaemia was investigated using coarse-graining spectral analysis of heart rate variability (HRV). Six young adults were exposed in random order to a hypoxia or control protocol, in supine and sitting postures, while end-tidal PCO2 (PET,CO2) was clamped at resting eucapnic levels. An initial 11 min period of euoxia (PET,O2 100 mmHg; 13.3 kPa) was followed by a 22 min exposure to hypoxia (PET,O2 55 mmHg; 7.3 kPa), or continued euoxia (control). Harmonic and fractal powers of HRV were determined for the terminal 400 heart beats in each time period. Ventilation was stimulated (P < 0.05) and cardiac dynamics altered only by exposure to hypoxia. The cardiac interpulse interval was shortened (P < 0.001) similarly during hypoxia in both body positions. Vagally mediated high-frequency harmonic power (Ph) of HRV was decreased by hypoxia only in the supine position, while the fractal dimension, also linked to cardiac vagal control, was decreased in the sitting position (P < 0.05). However, low-frequency harmonic power (Pl) and the HRV indicator of sympathetic activity (Pl/Ph) were not altered by hypoxia in either position. These results suggest that, in humans, tachycardia induced by moderate IC hypoxaemia (arterial O2 saturation Sa,O2, 85%) was mediated by vagal withdrawal, irrespective of body position and resting autonomic balance, while associated changes in HRV were positionally dependent. [source]


    An adaptive clinical Type 1 diabetes control protocol to optimize conventional self-monitoring blood glucose and multiple daily-injection therapy

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADAPTIVE CONTROL AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, Issue 5 2009
    Xing-Wei Wong
    Abstract The objective of this study was to develop a safe, robust and effective protocol for the clinical control of Type 1 diabetes using conventional self-monitoring blood glucose (SMBG) measurements, and multiple daily injection (MDI) with insulin analogues. A virtual patient method is used to develop an in silico simulation tool for Type 1 diabetes using data from a Type 1 diabetes patient cohort (n=40) . The tool is used to test two prandial insulin protocols, an adaptive protocol (AC) and a conventional intensive insulin therapy (IIT) protocol (CC) against results from a representative control cohort as a function of SMBG frequency. With the prandial protocols, optimal and suboptimal basal insulin replacement using a clinically validated, forced-titration regimen is also evaluated. A Monte Carlo (MC) analysis using variability and error distributions derived from the clinical and physiological literature is used to test efficacy and robustness. MC analysis is performed for over 1 400 000 simulated patient hours. All results are compared with control data from which the virtual patients were derived. In conditions of suboptimal basal insulin replacement, the AC protocol significantly decreases HbA1c for SMBG frequencies ,6/day compared with controls and the CC protocol. With optimal basal insulin, mild and severe hypoglycaemia is reduced by 86,100% over controls for all SMBG frequencies. Control with the CC protocol and suboptimal basal insulin replacement saturates at an SMBG frequency of 6/day. The forced-titration regimen requires a minimum SMBG frequency of 6/day to prevent increased hypoglycaemia. Overaggressive basal dose titration with the CC protocol at lower SMBG frequencies is likely caused by uncorrected postprandial hyperglycaemia from the previous night. From the MC analysis, a defined peak in control is achieved at an SMBG frequency of 8/day. However, 90% of the cohort meets American Diabetes Association recommended HbA1c with just 2 measurements a day. A further 7.5% requires 4 measurements a day and only 2.5% (1 patient) required 6 measurements a day. In safety, the AC protocol is the most robust to applied MC error. Over all SMBG frequencies, the median for severe hypoglycaemia increases from 0 to 0.12% and for mild hypoglycaemia by 0,5.19% compared with the unrealistic no error simulation. While statistically significant, these figures are still very low and the distributions are well below those of the controls group. An adaptive control protocol for Type 1 diabetes is tested in silico under conditions of realistic variability and error. The adaptive (AC) protocol is effective and safe compared with conventional IIT (CC) and controls. As the fear of hypoglycaemia is a large psychological barrier to appropriate glycaemic control, adaptive model-based protocols may represent the next evolution of IIT to deliver increased glycaemic control with increased safety over conventional methods, while still utilizing the most commonly used forms of intervention (SMBG and MDI). The use of MC methods to evaluate them provides a relevant robustness test that is not considered in the no error analyses of most other studies. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Application of model-free LQG subspace predictive control to TCP congestion control

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADAPTIVE CONTROL AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, Issue 6 2008
    Belinda A. Chiera
    Abstract We investigate the application of a model-free linear quadratic Gaussian (LQG) subspace-based predictive controller to Internet congestion control. Specifically, we consider a classically designed LQG linear congestion controller with a non-standard performance index and determine whether a model-free controller is a viable alternative in this instance. We employ the model-free subspace predictive controller methodology which we customize for end-to-end transmission control protocol (TCP) congestion control. A series of network simulations support the use of the more easily implementable model-free controller over its classical analogue. We further demonstrate that the model-free controller provides increased stability under transient network conditions when compared with the first feedback congestion controller, TCP Vegas. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Performance evaluation of CSMA/ID MAC protocol for IP over WDM ring networks

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, Issue 11 2008
    Jih-Hsin Ho
    Abstract In this paper, a packet pre-classification media access control protocol based on a carrier sense multiple access with idle detection (CSMA/ID) scheme is investigated for supporting IP packets over all-optical WDM ring networks. The purpose of the protocol is to increase throughput and to decrease the packet transmission delay of IP packets over optical networks in a metropolitan area network. This protocol avoids both packet collision and packet fragmentation. In order to improve the utilization of the network, the packets transmitted from a local area network are first pre-classified into various class queues of an access point (AP) according to their length. After checking the available space based on the wavelength received by the receivers of the AP, the packets in the queues are transmitted. An analytical model is developed to evaluate the performance of the protocol, with simulation results showing good network efficiency. The proposed network has short-term variations that introduce unfairness conditions. This problem could be overcome by assigning a quota on individual queues to allow all queues fair access. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Potential performance bottleneck in Linux TCP

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, Issue 11 2007
    Wenji Wu
    Abstract Transmission control protocol (TCP) is the most widely used transport protocol on the Internet today. Over the years, especially recently, due to requirements of high bandwidth transmission, various approaches have been proposed to improve TCP performance. The Linux 2.6 kernel is now preemptible. It can be interrupted mid-task, making the system more responsive and interactive. However, we have noticed that Linux kernel preemption can interact badly with the performance of the networking subsystem. In this paper, we investigate the performance bottleneck in Linux TCP. We systematically describe the trip of a TCP packet from its ingress into a Linux network end system to its final delivery to the application; we study the performance bottleneck in Linux TCP through mathematical modelling and practical experiments; finally, we propose and test one possible solution to resolve this performance bottleneck in Linux TCP. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Steady state and transient state behaviours analyses of TCP connections considering interactions between TCP connections and network

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, Issue 7 2005
    Hiroyuki Hisamatsu
    Abstract The Internet uses a window-based congestion control mechanism in transmission control protocol (TCP). In the literature, there have been a great number of analytical studies on TCP. Most of those studies have focused on the statistical behaviour of TCP by assuming a constant packet loss probability in the network. However, the packet loss probability, in reality, changes according to the packet transmission rates from TCP connections. Conversely, the window size of a TCP connection is dependent on the packet loss probability in the network. In this paper, we explicitly model the interaction between the congestion control mechanism of TCP and the network as a feedback system. By using this model, we analyse the steady state and the transient state behaviours of TCP. We derive the throughput and the packet loss probability of TCP, and the number of packets queued in the bottleneck router. We then analyse the transient state behaviour using a control theoretic approach, showing the influence of the number of TCP connections and the propagation delay on the transient state behaviour of TCP. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Wireless video streaming with TCP and simultaneous MAC packet transmission (SMPT),

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, Issue 5 2004
    Frank H. P. Fitzek
    Abstract Video streaming is expected to account for a large portion of the traffic in future networks, including wireless networks. It is widely accepted that the user datagram protocol (UDP) is the preferred transport protocol for video streaming and that the transmission control protocol (TCP) is unsuitable for streaming. The widespread use of UDP, however, has a number of drawbacks, such as unfairness and possible congestion collapse, which are avoided by TCP. In this paper we investigate the use of TCP as the transport layer protocol for streaming video in a multi-code CDMA cellular wireless system. Our approach is to stabilize the TCP throughput over the wireless links by employing a recently developed simultaneous MAC packet transmission (SMPT) approach at the link layer. We study the capacity, i.e. the number of customers per cell, and the quality of service for streaming video in the uplink direction. Our extensive simulations indicate that streaming over TCP in conjunction with SMPT gives good performance for video encoded in a closed loop, i.e. with rate control. We have also found that TCP is unsuitable (even in conjunction with SMPT) for streaming the more variable open-loop encoded video. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Necessary and sufficient conditions for solving consensus problems of double-integrator dynamics via sampled control

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ROBUST AND NONLINEAR CONTROL, Issue 15 2010
    Huiyang Liu
    Abstract In this paper, consensus problems of double-integrator dynamics via sampled control are investigated. The sampled control protocol is induced from continuous-time linear consensus protocol by using periodic sampling technology and zero-order hold circuit. With the obtained sampled control protocol, the continuous-time multi-agent system is equivalently transformed into a linear discrete-time system. Necessary and sufficient conditions are given to guarantee that all the agents asymptotically travel with zero relative positions and common velocities. Furthermore, consensus problem with continuous-time consensus protocol is re-analyzed. A necessary and sufficient condition is also obtained which is consistent with the special case when the sampling period tends to zero. The effectiveness of these algorithms is demonstrated through simulations. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    An infection control protocol: effectiveness of immersion solutions to reduce the microbial growth on dental prostheses

    JOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 5 2003
    A. C. Pavarina
    summary, This investigation evaluated the effectiveness of an infection control protocol for cleansing and disinfecting removable dental prostheses. Sixty-four dentures were rubbed with sterile cotton swab immediately after they had been taken from patients' mouths. Samples were individually placed in the culture medium and immediately incubated at 37 ± 2 °C. The dentures were scrubbed for 1 min with 4% chlorhexidine, rinsed for 1 min in sterile water and placed for 10 min in one of the following immersion solutions: 4% chlorhexidine gluconate, 1% sodium hypochlorite, Biocide (iodophors) and Amosan (alkaline peroxide). After the disinfection procedures, the dentures were immersed in sterile water for 3 min, reswabbed and the samples were incubated. All samples obtained in the initial culture were contaminated with micro-organisms. All the lower dentures immersed in Biocide showed positive growth, and the upper dentures were positive for growth in six of eight dentures. The 4% chlorhexidine gluconate, 1% sodium hypochlorite and Amosan solutions have been proved effective to reduce the growth of the micro-organisms in the 10 min immersion period. The protocol evaluated in this study seems to be a viable method to prevent cross-contamination between dental personnel and patients. [source]


    A Knowledge,based Algorithm for the Internet Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

    BULLETIN OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH, Issue 1 2002
    Freek Stulp
    Using a knowledge,based approach, the authors derive a protocol for the sequence transmission problem, which provides a high,level model of the Internet transmission control protocol (TCP). The knowledge,based protocol is correct for communication media where deletion and reordering errors may occur. Furthermore, it is shown that both sender and receiver eventually attain depth,n knowledge about the values of the messages for any n, but that common knowledge about the messages is not attainable. [source]


    Long-term results of mycophenolate mofetil as part of immunosuppressive induction therapy after liver transplantation

    CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 3 2006
    Jan M. Langrehr
    Abstract:, Background:, The addition of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) to the induction protocol resulted in a lower incidence of rejection episodes. However, the question whether MMF should be administered in combination with tacrolimus or cyclosporine has not been answered yet. In our study, we report on the long-term results of triple induction therapy after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), consisting of MMF and low-dose corticosteroids, in combination with either tacrolimus or cyclosporine. Methods:, Between March 1996 and April 1997, 120 consecutive patients, who underwent OLT at our institution, were enrolled in this study. Of these patients, 80 received triple induction therapy consisting of cyclosporine and MMF (40) or tacrolimus and MMF (40), in combination with low-dose corticosteroids, whereas the remaining 40 patients served as ,MMF-free' control group receiving dual induction therapy with tacrolimus and corticosteroids. Besides the eight-yr follow-up of patient and graft survival, clinical data were also reviewed for episodes of rejection and infection. Additionally, the early post-operative pharmacokinetics of mycophenolic acid (MPA, immunological active metabolite of MMF) were evaluated. Results:, Long-term results provided higher patient and graft survival after tacrolimus/MMF-based induction therapy than after cyclosporine/MMF-based induction therapy. However, the tacrolimus-based control protocol yielded similar results and, therefore, no significantly superior effect was observed when MMF was added. The same observation was made for incidence of rejection and infection episodes. AUC and Cmax of MPA increased in combination with tacrolimus compared with cyclosporine. Conclusions:, Although pharmacological synergy between tacrolimus and MMF was observed, MMF showed no significant beneficial effects in the immunosuppressive induction protocol, neither in combination with tacrolimus nor with cyclosporine. [source]


    Site-specific percutaneous absorption of methyl salicylate and VX in domestic swine

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, Issue 3 2002
    E. J. Scott Duncan
    Abstract The site specificity of the percutaneous absorption of methyl salicylate (MeS) and the organophosphate nerve agent VX (O -ethyl S -(2-diisopropylaminoethyl) methylphosphonothioate) was examined in anaesthetized domestic swine that were fully instrumented for physiological endpoints. Four different anatomical sites (ear, perineum, inguinal crease and epigastrium) were exposed to the MeS and the serum levels were measured over a 6-h time period. The dose absorbed at the ear region was 11 ,g cm,2 with an initial flux of 0.063 ,g cm,2min,1, whereas at the epigastrium region the dose absorbed was 3 ,g cm,2 with an initial flux of 0.025 ,g cm,2min,1. For this reason further studies were carried out with VX on the ear and the epigastrium only. In animals treated with agent on the epigastrium, blood cholinesterase (ChE) activity began to drop 90 min after application and continued to decline at a constant rate for the remainder of the experiment to ca. 25% of awake control activity. At this time there were negligible signs of poisoning and the medical prognosis was judged to be good. In contrast, the ChE activity in animals receiving VX on the ear decreased to 25% of awake control values within 45 min and levelled out at 5,6% by 120 min. Clinical signs of VX poisoning paralleled the ChE inhibition, progressing in severity over the duration of the exposure. It was judged that these animals would not survive. The dramatic site dependence of agent absorption leading to vastly different toxicological endpoints demonstrated in this model system has important ramifications for chemical protective suit development, threat assessment, medical countermeasures and contamination control protocols. Copyright © 2002 Crown in the right of Canada. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    The epidemiology of mouth cancer: a review of global incidence

    ORAL DISEASES, Issue 2 2000
    SR Moore
    Mouth cancer (143,145 ICD-9) is a major health problem in many parts of the world. While its incidence is relatively low in most western countries there are some important exceptions to this trend: on the Indian subcontinent and in other parts of Asia it remains one of the most common forms of cancer. This review article summarises the global incidence of mouth cancer using cancer mapS. Data have been compiled from the latest edition of Cancer Incidence in Five Continents and recent studies from various locations around the world. Significant geographic variation is noted in the incidence of mouth cancer, with high rates reported for the Indian subcontinent and parts of Asia (male incidence rates in excess of 10 per 100 000 per annum). It is also noted that as with other forms of oral cancer, the majority of population-based data for mouth cancer comes from the Western world with a paucity of reliable data from the so-called developing countrieS. Mouth cancer remains a serious health problem in many parts of the world with many regions reporting increasing incidence rates particularly in maleS. Ongoing research into the aetiologic risk factors associated with this disease must remain a very high priority if the causes of mouth cancer are to be established and disease control protocols introduced widely. [source]