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On the Study of Wireless Signal Noise for Designing Network Infrastructure of Knowledge Management Systems

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-07-31, 14:43 authored by C Luo, P Casaseca, X Wang, K Dahal, J C, P Ren
Knowledge and information management systems are usually supported by wireless networks that strongly rely on reliable received signal strength. The interruption and outage of such system may lead to significant performance disruption. In order to deal with one of the major contributors: noise, this paper investigates the fundamentals of wireless signals and proposes a method to identify and model the noise components quantitatively. We investigate the theoretical method and empirically study two wireless system configurations - one with omnidirectional antennas and one with directional antennas. Results based on real-world experiments confirm the existence and exact contributions of coloured noise components. Based on the preliminary results of this study, future information management systems can be designed with enhanced network support to cope with the variation of signals for improved performance.

Funding

This paper is sponsored by the Research Councils UK Digital Economy Theme Sustainable Society Network+ and Royal Society-NSFC Grant No. IE131036, and partially supported by DHI Scotland through the Smartcough/Macmasters project.

History

Notes

Copyright © 2015 IEEE

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Language

en

Citation

9th International Conference on Software, Knowledge, Information Management & Applications, 15 – 17 May 2015, Nepal

Department

  • Computer Science

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