We develop a large number of software tools and hosting infrastructures to support the research developed at the Department. We will be detailing in this section the different tools available. You can take a look for the moment at the offer available within the UPF Knowledge Portal, the innovations created in the context of EU projects in the Innovation Radar and the software sections of some of our research groups:

 

 Artificial Intelligence

 Nonlinear Time Series Analysis

 Web Research 

 

 Music Technology

 Interactive  Technologies

 Barcelona MedTech

 Natural Language  Processing

 Nonlinear Time Series  Analysis

UbicaLab

Wireless Networking

Educational Technologies

GitHub

 

 

Back Dias, GM, Bellalta B, Oechsner S. The impact of dual prediction schemes on the reduction of the number of transmissions in sensor networks. Computer Communications

Dias, GM, Bellalta B, Oechsner S. The impact of dual prediction schemes on the reduction of the number of transmissions in sensor networks. Computer Communications.

Future Internet of Things (IoT) applications will require that billions of wireless devices transmit data to the cloud frequently. However, the wireless medium access is pointed as a problem for the next generations of wireless networks; hence, the number of data transmissions in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) can quickly become a bottleneck, disrupting the exponential growth in the number of interconnected devices, sensors, and amount of produced data. Therefore, keeping a low number of data transmissions is critical to incorporate new sensor nodes and measure a great variety of parameters in future generations of WSNs. Thanks to the high accuracy and low complexity of state-of-the-art forecasting algorithms, Dual Prediction Schemes (DPSs) are potential candidates to optimize the data transmissions in WSNs at the finest level because they facilitate for sensor nodes to avoid unnecessary transmissions without affecting the quality of their measurements. In this work, we present a sensor network model that uses statistical theorems to describe the expected impact of DPSs and data aggregation in WSNs. We aim to provide a foundation for future works by characterizing the theoretical gains of processing data in sensors and conditioning its transmission to the predictions’ accuracy. Our simulation results show that the number of transmissions can be reduced by almost 98% in the sensor nodes with the highest workload. We also detail the impact of predicting and aggregating transmissions according to the parameters that can be observed in common scenarios, such as sensor nodes’ transmission ranges, the correlation between measurements of different sensors, and the period between two consecutive measurements in a sensor.

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