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Seminar Announcement
These events are organized by various sub-sets of the IEEE Toronto Section.
The contact person listed below is the volunteer who has arranged this event.
Please use the e-mail link provided if you have any questions, suggestions,
or concerns.
| Title
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Signal Processing Challenges in Wireless Location
a Signal Processing Society Distinguished Lecture
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| Speaker
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Dr. Ali Sayed, F-IEEE
Electrical Engineering Department
University of California at Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
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| Day and Time
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Thursday, April 14, 2005, 3:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
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| Location
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Room ENG 101, Centre for Computing and Engineering
245 Church Street (at Gould), Ryerson University, Toronto
- map
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| Organizer
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IEEE Toronto Signals and Applications Chapter
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| Contact
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Sridar Krishnan
No need to confirm attendance - everyone welcome
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| Abstract
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Wireless location refers to obtaining the geographic coordinates of a
mobile subscriber in cellular or WLAN environments. Wireless location
finding has emerged as an essential public safety feature of future
cellular systems. This has been in response to a 1996 federal order in
the US that mandates all wireless service providers to provide accurate
location information of an emergency 911 (E-911) caller to public safety
answering points. The mandate aims to solve a serious public safety
problem that emerges from the fact that today more than half of the 911
emergency calls originate from mobile phones whose location cannot be
determined with existing technology. However, there are many
difficulties that are characteristic of the wireless environment that
make meeting the mandated objective within the desired accuracy rather
challenging.
This lecture provides an overview of some of the signal
processing challenges that arise in this application and describes
advances that have been made in this regard over the last few years.
Some of the advances include the development of enhanced receiver
structures that are robust to fast channel fading, low signal-to-noise
ratio conditions, and severe multipath propagation conditions. Once
fully developed and deployed, there will be many other applications of
the E-911 technology beyond its original motivation such as location
sensitive billing, fraud protection, asset tracking, fleet management,
intelligent transportation systems, mobile yellow pages, and even
cellular system design and management. Increasingly, application-level
software programs will be incorporating location information into their
features in order to utilize this information when it becomes available.
For example, asset tracking and management software would incorporate
location information into their database for enhanced tracking
capabilities. As such, wireless location information will add a new
dimension to many future applications. A demo illustrating the operation
of wireless location schemes developed in the speaker's research
laboratory will be shown.
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| Biography
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Ali H. Sayed received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford
University in 1992. He is Professor and Vice-Chairman of Electrical
Engineering at UCLA where he directs the Adaptive Systems Laboratory
(www.ee.ucla.edu/asl). He has published widely in the areas of adaptive
filtering, estimation theory, and signal processing for communications
with over 200 articles and 4 books. He is the author of the textbook
Fundamentals of Adaptive Filtering (Wiley, NY, 2003). He is a Fellow of
IEEE and serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on
Signal Processing. His research has received several recognitions
including the 1996 IEEE D. G. Fink Prize, a 2002 Best Paper Award from
the IEEE Signal Processing Society, the 2003 Kuwait Prize, and two Best
Student Paper Awards at international meetings (1999,2001). He currently
serves as a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Signal Processing
Society. He is also a member of the Publications and Award Boards of the
IEEE Signal Processing Society, and serves as General Chairman of ICASSP
2008.
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