Publications by authors named "J B Coder"

Radio spectrum is a scarce resource. To meet demands, new wireless technologies must operate in shared spectrum over unlicensed bands (coexist). We consider coexistence of Long-Term Evolution (LTE) License-Assisted Access (LAA) with incumbent Wi-Fi systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Light-in-flight sensing has emerged as a promising technique in image reconstruction applications at various wavelengths. We report a microwave imaging system that uses an array of transmitters and a single receiver operating in continuous transmit-receive mode. Captures take a few microseconds and the corresponding images cover a spatial range of tens of square meters with spatial resolution of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This article aims to provide a narrative for addressing wireless coexistence in medical devices to help medical device developers, test engineers, and regulatory affairs personnel throughout the device life cycle. Accordingly, we present a case-study covering the coexistence evaluation process including the risk analysis of the wireless functionality of a hypothetical medical device, determining the corresponding risk category, specification of the device functional wireless performance (FWP), wireless coexistence testing, and measurement of the intended/untended signal ratio. Also, we propose a simple method for translating the test outcome into user recommendations for minimum/maximum separation distances between the device, its intended companion, and the source of unintended signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To improve spectrum sharing between long-term evolution (LTE) license assisted access (LAA) and incumbent systems such as wireless local area networks (WLANs) in unlicensed spectrum, listen before talk (LBT) has been proposed as a candidate for LAA channel access. To allow for a robust spectrum sensing performance, LBT may use a backoff-slot duration that is substantially larger than its WLAN counterpart. There is potential for an unknown backoff slot-jamming (SJ) effect, which may significantly decrease channel access probability (CAP) and throughput of LAA-LBT links.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF