Vol.8 No.1 April 15, 2012
Research Articles for the Theme Issues
Study and Development of the Transmission Method for
Large Multimedia File Size Using MMS Technology (001-024)
Andik Setyono, Md J. Alam, and C. Eswaran
Mobile technology has grown rapidly in recent years
due to the availability of sophisticated mobile phones in the market.
Many features offered in the mobile phones encourage people to develop
mobile-phone-based systems. Internet applications also have been
developed to transmit data by mobile phone in a mobile environment. In
this paper, we study and develop transmission methods for large
multimedia files using MMS technology. We implement file compression,
splitting, masking and cropping techniques to improve the ability of MMS
technology in multimedia message delivery so that it can transmit large
size data files which are not possible with the existing technologies.
We hope that this research can provide a valuable contribution to the
development of MMS technology. The experimental results demonstrate that
the proposed techniques perform better than the conventional MMS
technologies in preserving the quality of data. The modified MMS
technology can be used to develop practical client-server applications.
Live Sharing with Multimodal Modes in Mobile Network (025-033)
Xiao Zeng, Kongqiao Wang, and
Da Huo
Live video sharing is a newly
generated and interesting service, with which users can broadcast and
view the videos being recorded by mobile phones. However, mobile network
usually blocks users to enjoy that service since video transmitting is
still a nontrivial task with poor bandwidth. In order to make live
sharing easier in mobile environment, a novel service with multimodal
modes is proposed in this paper, which could save a lot of bandwidth for
sharing and is more adaptive in mobile network. To save bandwidth and
introduce differentiated user experience, real-time extracted
key-frames, audio or hybrid information can be transmitted instead of
original video stream. Both publishers and receivers can select suitable
mode according to their preference or network condition. Thanks to the
key frame mode of the proposed service, detailed tagging of video
content and live cooperation with other SNS can be implemented.
Experimental results and user study demonstrate that the proposed
multimodal live sharing service is of high adaption of mobile network
and introduces direct and interesting user experience.
An Energy-adaptive Multiple Paths Routing Approach for Wireless Sensor
Networks (034-048)
Jinglun Shi,
Kang Cai, Chenghong He, Gang Wei, and Zhilong Shan
A wireless sensor network (WSN) is
expected to have a significant impact on military and civil applications
such as target field imaging, intrusion detection, weather monitoring.
Sensors are battery-powered, and hence energy-conserving communications
are essential to prolong the sensor network’s lifetime. Also, given the
unreliable nature of the wireless channels and the high failure rate of
the individual sensors, a fault tolerant routing protocol with
energy-efficiency is getting more and more attention. In this paper, we
propose an energy-adaptive multiple paths routing algorithm (EMRA) for
wireless sensor networks. It consists of three elements: () gradients to
disseminate data over multiple paths from a source to a sink, () rules
used for setting up disjoint multiple paths, and () policies for
selecting multiple paths. By limiting the maximum number of the
gradients, the exploratory data messages forwarded is decreased
efficiently. By using the rules for setting up disjoint multiple paths,
the sink node can get a sufficient number of disjoint multiple paths,
which enables EMRA to recover from a routing failure quickly. Our
analysis and simulation results reveal that EMRA performs better than
the existing multiple paths routing algorithms in terms of the average
dissipated energy and the delay to set up multiple paths.
Music Visualization Technique of Repetitive Structure Representation to
Support Intuitive Estimation of Music Affinity and Lightness (049-071)
Tatiana
Endrjukaite and Naoko Kosugi
This paper proposes a method to
identify and visualize repetitive structures in a pairwise
representation of music to support people to imagine their affinity for
music and the lightness of music intuitively, or in other words without
listening to it. Repetitive structures in this paper are fragments that
a music piece contains multiple times, and all these fragments may be
slightly different but are perceived as very similar. For example, a
tune might have little difference in tonality and could be performed by
different kinds of musical instruments. We propose an algorithm to
identify repetitive structures in a tune by using a self-similarity
matrix. Identified structures are visualized on two kinds of images. One
is a colored cylinder of varying diameter where colors represent
repetitions and the diameter represents volume changes; the other is
repetitions lines image, where different pairs of repetitions are shown
on the Y-axis and the duration of each repeated pair is shown on the
X-axis with a color. We selected eight tunes based on music psychology
to evaluate the performance of the identification and visualization
technique. Finally, we found that the amount of repetitions is related
to the affinity for music, but not to the lightness of music. Volumes in
both high-affinity music and high-lightness music change drastically.
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