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20 pages, 6224 KiB  
Article
Polysaccharides from Trametes versicolor as a Potential Prebiotic to Improve the Gut Microbiota in High-Fat Diet Mice
by Ming Bai, Zhenfeng Huang, Xiaoya Zheng, Mingyong Hou and Song Zhang
Microorganisms 2024, 12(8), 1654; https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12081654 - 13 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1072
Abstract
Polysaccharides derived from Trametes versicolor have been found to exhibit hypolipidemic activity in hyperlipidemic mice, but the mechanism by which they modulate intestinal flora is still unclear. Currently, this study aimed to investigate the regulatory effects of extracellular (EPTV) and intracellular polysaccharides from [...] Read more.
Polysaccharides derived from Trametes versicolor have been found to exhibit hypolipidemic activity in hyperlipidemic mice, but the mechanism by which they modulate intestinal flora is still unclear. Currently, this study aimed to investigate the regulatory effects of extracellular (EPTV) and intracellular polysaccharides from T. versicolor (IPTV) on the dysbiosis of intestinal flora in mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD). The results showed that the oral administration of T. versicolor polysaccharides significantly ameliorated lipid accumulation and steatosis in hepatocytes. The gut dysbiosis in the HFD mice was characterized by a decrease in abundance and diversity of bacteria and an increase in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. However, T. versicolor polysaccharides attenuated these changes and reduced the relative abundance of bile-salt-hydrolase (BSH)-producing bacteria, such as Bacillus, Enterococcus, Bifidobacterium, and Lactococcus. It is noteworthy that T. versicolor polysaccharides also restored the disorganization of intestinal fungi in HFD mice, with EPTV treatment leading to a higher relative abundance of Basidiomycota and Ascomycota compared to IPTV. Additionally, T. versicolor polysaccharides enhanced the growth of butyrate-producing bacteria via the buk and but pathways, accompanied by an increase in short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), especially butyrate. IPTV also increased the expression of G-protein-coupled receptors 41 (GPR41) and 43 (GPR43) by 40.52% and 113.24% each, as compared to 62.42% and 110.28%, respectively, for EPTV. It is suggested that IPTV and EPTV have the potential to counteract hyperlipidemia-associated intestinal flora disorders and improve lipid metabolism. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gut Microbiota)
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<p>The procedure of animal experiment.</p>
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<p>Effects of PTVs on lipid profiles of high-fat-diet-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) Serum lipid profiles including total cholesterol (TC), triglyceride (TG), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C). Data are presented as means ± SD, <span class="html-italic">n</span> = 10. <sup>##</sup> <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with NC group; * <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.05 and ** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with HC group. (<b>B</b>) HE staining of liver was performed to observe the morphology of liver (×400). Yellow arrow indicates fat pathological changes.</p>
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<p>PTVs restore the high-fat-diet-induced gut bacterial dysbiosis at different taxonomic levels in HFD-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) The relative abundance of gut microbes at phylum levels; (<b>B</b>) the ratio of Firmicutes–Bacteroidetes at phylum levels; (<b>C</b>) heat map summarizing the relative abundance of gut microbes at genus levels; (<b>D</b>) evolutionary clustering analysis of bacterial community structure; (<b>E</b>) PCoA analysis of bacterial community structure; (<b>F</b>) NMDS analysis of bacterial community structure. Data are presented as means ± SD, <span class="html-italic">n</span> = 6. <sup>##</sup> <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with NC group; ** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with HC group.</p>
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<p>Dynamics of the intestinal microorganism in HFD-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) The cladogram of intestinal bacteria with significant differences between NC, HC, IPTV (200 mg/kg), and EPTV (200 mg/kg); (<b>B</b>) the cladogram of intestinal fungi with significant differences between NC, HC, IPTV (200 mg/kg), and EPTV (200 mg/kg); (<b>C</b>) bacterium–bacterium co-occurrence network; (<b>D</b>) fungus–fungus co-occurrence network.</p>
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<p>Effects of PTVs on specific gut microbial population at genus and species levels in HFD-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) The relative abundance of gut BSH-producing bacteria; (<b>B</b>) the relative abundance of gut SCFA-producing bacteria. Data are presented as means ± SD, <span class="html-italic">n</span> = 6. <sup>#</sup> <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.05 and <sup>##</sup> <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with NC group; * <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.05 and ** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with HC group.</p>
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<p>PTVs restore the high-fat-diet-induced gut fungal dysbiosis at different taxonomic levels in HFD-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) The relative abundance of gut fungal microbes at phylum levels; (<b>B</b>) the relative abundance of gut fungal microbes at family levels; (<b>C</b>) heat map summarizing the relative abundance of gut fungal microbes at genus levels; (<b>D</b>) evolutionary clustering analysis of fungal microbe community structure; (<b>E</b>) PCoA analysis of fungal microbe community structure; (<b>F</b>) NMDS analysis of fungal microbe community structure. Data are presented as means ± SD, <span class="html-italic">n</span> = 6.</p>
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<p>Prediction of functional pathway using PICRUSt analysis. (<b>A</b>) Total KEGG pathways changed in all groups. (<b>B</b>) COG pathways changed in all groups.</p>
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<p>PTVs upregulates butyrate production by <span class="html-italic">buk</span> and <span class="html-italic">but</span> genes accompanied by an increase in SCFA receptor expression in HFD-fed mice. (<b>A</b>) GC–MS chromatograms of SCFA in feces. (<b>B</b>) SCFA concentration in feces measured by GC–MS. (<b>C</b>) Predominant butyrate-producing genes: relative abundance of butyrate kinase (<span class="html-italic">buk</span>) and butyryl-CoA (<span class="html-italic">but</span>) bacterial genes in feces. (<b>D</b>) Protein expression of SCFA receptors (GPR41, GPR43) in colon. Data are presented as means ± SD, <span class="html-italic">n</span> = 5. <sup>##</sup> <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with NC group; * <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.05 and ** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, compared with HC group.</p>
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<p>Spearman’s correlations between the intestinal microbe and lipid metabolic parameters. (<b>A</b>) Heat map describing Spearman’s correlations between the intestinal bacterial community and lipid metabolic parameters. (<b>B</b>) Heat map describing Spearman’s correlations between the intestinal fungal community and lipid metabolic parameters. (<b>C</b>) Heat map describing Spearman’s correlations between the intestinal bacterial and fungal communities. * <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.05, ** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.01, *** <span class="html-italic">p</span> &lt; 0.001.</p>
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19 pages, 2242 KiB  
Article
Time-of-Day and Day-of-Week Effects on TV and OTT Media Choices: Evidence from South Korea
by Yun-Woo Choi and Changjun Lee
J. Theor. Appl. Electron. Commer. Res. 2024, 19(1), 1-19; https://doi.org/10.3390/jtaer19010001 - 25 Dec 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1843
Abstract
The objective of this manuscript is to investigate the determinants influencing the selection of over-the-top (OTT) platforms as opposed to traditional television mediums—cable, Internet protocol television (IPTV), and satellite broadcasting—for the consumption of content such as television shows and films. Employing data extracted [...] Read more.
The objective of this manuscript is to investigate the determinants influencing the selection of over-the-top (OTT) platforms as opposed to traditional television mediums—cable, Internet protocol television (IPTV), and satellite broadcasting—for the consumption of content such as television shows and films. Employing data extracted from the 2020 Media Panel comprising 423,851 observations garnered from personal media diaries, this study scrutinizes the impacts of individual attributes, environmental conditions, and temporal factors on platform choice. The findings reveal a temporal influence characterized by a “Friday effect” and a heightened preference for OTT platforms during early afternoon (12:00–16:00) and late-night hours (00:00–04:00). Notably, the likelihood of selecting OTT platforms is significantly augmented during the late-night period in comparison to other time frames. In relation to individual characteristics, variables such as male gender, younger age, higher educational attainment, and elevated income levels were positively correlated with a predilection for OTT platforms. Additionally, environmental variables such as possession of an unlimited data plan and ownership of a tablet personal computer also emerged as significant predictors for OTT preference. Furthermore, the presence of a beam projector during late-night hours and residing in a household with multiple occupants during afternoon hours also served as contributing factors for OTT utilization. In conclusion, the study offers critical insights for stakeholders in both traditional television and burgeoning OTT markets, providing data-driven recommendations for the strategic allocation of resources in consideration of day-of-week and time-of-day variables. Full article
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<p>Ratios of pay TV to OTT choices by day of week (N obs: 423,851).</p>
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<p>Ratios of pay TV to OTT choices by time of day (N obs: 423,851).</p>
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<p>Cross–densities of pay TV vs. OTT selections by time of day and day of week (N.obs: 423,851).</p>
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<p>Gender differences in pay TV versus OTT selection rates by time of day and day of week (N.obs: 423,851).</p>
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<p>Age group differences in pay TV versus OTT selection rates by time of day and day of week (N.obs: 423,851).</p>
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<p>Percentages of TV versus OTT choices by time of day and day of week, with gender differences among 10–30-year-olds.</p>
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<p>Differences between income groups in pay TV versus OTT selection rates by time of day and day of week.</p>
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18 pages, 7166 KiB  
Article
Investigating IPTV Malware in the Wild
by Adam Lockett, Ioannis Chalkias, Cagatay Yucel, Jane Henriksen-Bulmer and Vasilis Katos
Future Internet 2023, 15(10), 325; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi15100325 - 28 Sep 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2695
Abstract
Technologies providing copyright-infringing IPTV content are commonly used as an illegal alternative to legal IPTV subscriptions and services, as they usually have lower monetary costs and can be more convenient for users who follow content from different sources. These infringing IPTV technologies may [...] Read more.
Technologies providing copyright-infringing IPTV content are commonly used as an illegal alternative to legal IPTV subscriptions and services, as they usually have lower monetary costs and can be more convenient for users who follow content from different sources. These infringing IPTV technologies may include websites, software, software add-ons, and physical set-top boxes. Due to the free or low cost of illegal IPTV technologies, illicit IPTV content providers will often resort to intrusive advertising, scams, and the distribution of malware to increase their revenue. We developed an automated solution for collecting and analysing malware from illegal IPTV technologies and used it to analyse a sample of illicit IPTV websites, application (app) stores, and software. Our results show that our IPTV Technologies Malware Analysis Framework (IITMAF) classified 32 of the 60 sample URLs tested as malicious compared to running the same test using publicly available online antivirus solutions, which only detected 23 of the 60 sample URLs as malicious. Moreover, the IITMAF also detected malicious URLs and files from 31 of the sample’s websites, one of which had reported ransomware behaviour. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cybersecurity)
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<p>Flow chart of the framework’s automated malware collection and analysis methodology.</p>
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<p>DFD design of the IITMAF software solution.</p>
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<p>Dispatcher console showing files being downloaded from an illicit IPTV website.</p>
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<p>Sample generated analysis report.</p>
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<p>Configuration file of the IITMAF software solution.</p>
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<p>Dispatcher console showing the iterative URL collection functionality.</p>
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<p>Sample analysis report showing dynamic analysis and iterative URL collection results.</p>
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<p>Sample of a Hybrid Analysis report showing the analysis results for a scraped file.</p>
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<p>IITMAF report showing collected URLs for one of the illicit webpages.</p>
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<p>Pie chart for the most common ATT and CK techniques observed.</p>
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<p>IITMAF report showing matched YARA rules for a URL.</p>
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13 pages, 940 KiB  
Article
The Relationship between the Service Quality of IPTV Home Training and Consumers’ Exercise Satisfaction and Continuous Use during the COVID-19 Pandemic
by Taesoo Cho, Taeyoung Cho and Hao Zhang
Businesses 2023, 3(2), 310-322; https://doi.org/10.3390/businesses3020020 - 30 May 2023
Viewed by 1922
Abstract
This study aims to provide operators with measures for successful IPTV utilisation by identifying the quality of IPTV services for home training and analysing the relationship between consumers’ exercise satisfaction and continuous use to respond to the COVID-19 era. To achieve the research [...] Read more.
This study aims to provide operators with measures for successful IPTV utilisation by identifying the quality of IPTV services for home training and analysing the relationship between consumers’ exercise satisfaction and continuous use to respond to the COVID-19 era. To achieve the research purpose, people who exercise at home using IPTV home training pro-grams were selected as the sample population. The relationship between efficiency, availability, security, and practicability, which are sub-factors of the service quality of IPTV home training, was analysed for exercise satisfaction and continuous use. The analysis methods include frequency analysis and Cronbach’s α using SPSS 20.0 and AMOS 20.0. Validation was conducted through correlation analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, and structural equation model analysis. In addition, Harman’s one-factor verification was conducted to determine the common method bias. All statistically significant levels were set at the p < 0.05 level. The results show that efficiency, availability, security, and practicability have a positive effect on exercise satisfaction, and exercise satisfaction has a positive effect on continuous use. First, during COVID-19, IPTV plays an important role in helping consumers exercise at home and indoors. Second, the subjects of this study showed that individuals 40 years old and older are exercising the most. Therefore, it is assumed that consumers will continue to participate if they provide programs that young people can do. Third, since various human disasters, natural disasters, and other un-predictable phenomena such as COVID-19 are occurring worldwide, policymakers should try to activate programs such as IPTV’s home training that can be done indoors. Full article
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<p>Proposed model of the structural relationships.</p>
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<p>Results of the structural equation model.</p>
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33 pages, 7828 KiB  
Article
Process Mining IPTV Customer Eye Gaze Movement Using Discrete-Time Markov Chains
by Zhi Chen, Shuai Zhang, Sally McClean, Fionnuala Hart, Michael Milliken, Brahim Allan and Ian Kegel
Algorithms 2023, 16(2), 82; https://doi.org/10.3390/a16020082 - 2 Feb 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2932
Abstract
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) research has extensively employed eye-tracking technologies in a variety of fields. Meanwhile, the ongoing development of Internet Protocol TV (IPTV) has significantly enriched the TV customer experience, which is of great interest to researchers across academia and industry. A previous [...] Read more.
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) research has extensively employed eye-tracking technologies in a variety of fields. Meanwhile, the ongoing development of Internet Protocol TV (IPTV) has significantly enriched the TV customer experience, which is of great interest to researchers across academia and industry. A previous study was carried out at the BT Ireland Innovation Centre (BTIIC), where an eye tracker was employed to record user interactions with a Video-on-Demand (VoD) application, the BT Player. This paper is a complementary and subsequent study of the analysis of eye-tracking data in our previously published introductory paper. Here, we propose a method for integrating layout information from the BT Player with mining the process of customer eye movement on the screen, thereby generating HCI and Industry-relevant insights regarding user experience. We incorporate a popular Machine Learning model, a discrete-time Markov Chain (DTMC), into our methodology, as the eye tracker records each gaze movement at a particular frequency, which is a good example of discrete-time sequences. The Markov Model is found suitable for our study, and it helps to reveal characteristics of the gaze movement as well as the user interface (UI) design on the VoD application by interpreting transition matrices, first passage time, proposed ‘most likely trajectory’ and other Markov properties of the model. Additionally, the study has revealed numerous promising areas for future research. And the code involved in this study is open access on GitHub. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Process Mining and Its Applications)
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<p>BT Player Screenshot [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>Fitts’ Law Graph–Object Size vs Usability Index [<a href="#B31-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">31</a>].</p>
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<p>A complete view of the test environment [<a href="#B11-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">11</a>].</p>
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<p>“Content purchase”–Screen <b>A</b> &amp; <b>B</b> (<b>A</b>: with rent option; <b>B</b>: without rent option).</p>
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<p>“Content viewing”–Original (<b>top</b>) &amp; Layout-only (<b>bottom</b>) screens [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>Tobii Studio Image Co-Ordinate System.</p>
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<p>AOIs and corner co-ordinates–“content purchase” screens.</p>
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<p>Conversion from Gaze Coordinate to Block Label [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>Example of gaze movement data in MySQL table.</p>
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<p>Initial State Distribution–“content viewing” screen.</p>
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<p>Example of state-change pair generation (from sequential events to transition pairs).</p>
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<p>Data pipeline throughout our study [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>(<b>a</b>) Transition Matrix for Screen A; (<b>b</b>) DTMC Plot for Screen A.</p>
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<p>(<b>a</b>) Transition Matrix for Screen B; (<b>b</b>) DTMC Plot for Screen B.</p>
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<p>Screen A: (<b>a</b>) Section <span class="html-italic">Q</span> in the transition matrix; (<b>b</b>) Section <span class="html-italic">R</span> in the transition matrix.</p>
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<p>Fundamental Matrix <span class="html-italic">N</span> for DTMC–Screen A.</p>
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<p>Screen B: (<b>a</b>) Section <span class="html-italic">Q</span> in the transition matrix; (<b>b</b>) Section <span class="html-italic">R</span> in the transition matrix.</p>
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<p>Fundamental Matrix <span class="html-italic">N</span> for DTMC–Screen B.</p>
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<p>Markov Model properties–“content viewing” screen.</p>
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<p>Transition matrix–“content viewing” screen [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>Matrix of mean first passage time–“content viewing” screen [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>Most likely gaze trajectory–“content viewing” screen [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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<p>“Content viewing” screen–DTMC visualisation: (<b>a</b>) R plotting; (<b>b</b>) D3.js plotting [<a href="#B16-algorithms-16-00082" class="html-bibr">16</a>].</p>
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18 pages, 2452 KiB  
Article
An Adaptive Hierarchical Hybrid Multicast Based on Information-Centric Networking
by Bo Li, Jinlin Wang, Xiaoyong Zhu, Jiali You and Linlin Hu
Electronics 2021, 10(23), 3002; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10233002 - 2 Dec 2021
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1640
Abstract
Many information-centric services have emerged, such as IPTV and video conferencing. These services put a lot of demands on scalable multicast communication. However, traditional IP multicast has low adoption because of its poor scalability. Therefore, some stateless multicast methods were proposed, which encapsulate [...] Read more.
Many information-centric services have emerged, such as IPTV and video conferencing. These services put a lot of demands on scalable multicast communication. However, traditional IP multicast has low adoption because of its poor scalability. Therefore, some stateless multicast methods were proposed, which encapsulate the destination’s information into the packet header without requiring routers to maintain the multicast forwarding state. However, stateless multicast also faces some problems, such as ingress router overload, high forwarding overhead, packet redundancy, etc. In addition, most multicast methods cannot optimize the multicast tree because the multicast flow is simply forwarded along the shortest path tree from the source to receivers. This paper proposes an Adaptive Hierarchical Hybrid Multicast (AHHM) based on Information-Centric Networking. To balance the forwarding states and forwarding overhead, AHHM is designed as a two-layer structure, in which the upper layer establishes a stateful main tree and the lower layer establishes several stateless sub trees. The router on the main tree is defined as the multicast join node (MJN), and AHHM uses the Name Resolution System to maintain the mapping between each multicast group name and corresponding MJNs. To optimize the multicast transmission path, we designed the minimum cost selection strategy for users to select the appropriate MJN to join. Simulation results show that compared with Source-Specific Multicast (SSM) and Bit Index Explicit Replication (BIER), AHHM can not only reduce the multicast forwarding states but also reduce the control overhead and link load. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Networks)
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<p>An example of the adaptive hierarchical hybrid multicast system.</p>
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<p>The message sequence chart diagram of joining a group.</p>
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<p>The example of the join process in AHHM. (<b>a</b>) R1 joins the multicast group; (<b>b</b>) R2 joins the multicast group; (<b>c</b>) R3 joins the multicast group.</p>
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<p>The example of the MJN selection process in AHHM.</p>
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<p>The message sequence chart diagram of joining a group.</p>
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<p>The example of the leave process in AHHM. (<b>a</b>) R1 leaves the multicast group; (<b>b</b>) R2 leaves the multicast group; (<b>c</b>) R3 leaves the multicast group.</p>
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<p>The example of the data forwarding process in AHHM.</p>
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<p>The comparison of the control overhead. (<b>a</b>) The comparison of the control overhead with different thresholds; (<b>b</b>) The comparison of the control overhead with different numbers of receivers; (<b>c</b>) The comparison of the control overhead with different numbers of groups; (<b>d</b>) The CDF of the control overhead in each multicast method.</p>
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<p>The comparison of multicast forwarding state. (<b>a</b>) The comparison of the number of multicast forwarding states with different thresholds; (<b>b</b>) The comparison of the number of multicast forwarding states with different numbers of receivers; (<b>c</b>) The comparison of the number of multicast forwarding states with different numbers of groups; (<b>d</b>) The CDF of the number of multicast forwarding states in each multicast method.</p>
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<p>The comparison of link load. (<b>a</b>) The comparison of the link load with different thresholds; (<b>b</b>) The comparison of the link load with different numbers of receivers; (<b>c</b>) The comparison of link load with different numbers of groups; (<b>d</b>) The CDF of the link load in each multicast method.</p>
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20 pages, 1333 KiB  
Article
Sub-Tree-Based Approach for Reconfiguration of Light-Tree Pair without Flow Interruption in Sparse Wavelength Converter Network
by Amanvon Ferdinand Atta, Joël Christian Adépo, Bernard Cousin and Souleymane Oumtanaga
Information 2021, 12(5), 211; https://doi.org/10.3390/info12050211 - 17 May 2021
Viewed by 1953
Abstract
Network reconfiguration is an important mechanism for network operators to optimize network performance and optical flow transfer. It concerns unicast and multicast connections. Multicast connections are required to meet the bandwidth requirements of multicast applications, such as Internet Protocol-based TeleVision (IPTV), distance learning, [...] Read more.
Network reconfiguration is an important mechanism for network operators to optimize network performance and optical flow transfer. It concerns unicast and multicast connections. Multicast connections are required to meet the bandwidth requirements of multicast applications, such as Internet Protocol-based TeleVision (IPTV), distance learning, and telemedicine. In optical networks, a multicast connection is made possible by the creation of an optical tree-shaped path called a light-tree. The problem of light-tree pair reconfiguration is addressed in this study. Given an initial light-tree used to transfer an optical flow and a final light-tree that is computed by the network operator to optimize network performance, the goal is to migrate the optical flow from the initial light-tree to the final light-tree without flow interruption. Flow interruption is not desirable for network operators because it forces them to pay financial penalties to their customers. To solve this problem, existing methods use a branch approach that is inefficient if some network nodes do not have wavelength conversion capability. Therefore, we proposed in this study a sub-tree-based method. This approach selects and configures sub-tree pairs from the light-tree pair (initial light-tree, final light-tree) to be reconfigured. Then, we produce a sequence of configurations. The performance study confirms that our method is efficient in solving the problem of light-tree pair reconfiguration because our method does not cause flow interruption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Information and Communications Technology)
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<p>Illustration of reconfiguration benefit.</p>
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<p>Illustration of a sequence of configurations returned by MBB_1.</p>
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<p>Illustration of a sequence of configurations returned by BpBAR_2.</p>
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<p>Instance of light-tree pair containing each kind of sub-tree pair.</p>
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<p>Flowchart of our method (i.e., Algorithm 1); SSPDL = set of sub-tree pairs with disjointed links; SSPSL = set of sub-tree pairs with shared links.</p>
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<p>Instance of problem.</p>
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<p>A view of the execution of the configuration sequence returned by our method.</p>
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<p>Network topologies: (<b>a</b>) 14-node NSFNET; (<b>b</b>) 40-node GEANT; (<b>c</b>) 75-node CORONET.</p>
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<p>Comparison of the average rate of flow interruptions.</p>
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<p>Comparison of the cost of spare wavelengths.</p>
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<p>Comparison of the number of steps.</p>
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20 pages, 2039 KiB  
Article
A New Efficient Architecture for Adaptive Bit-Rate Video Streaming
by Muhammad Hamza Bin Waheed, Faisal Jamil, Amir Qayyum, Harun Jamil, Omar Cheikhrouhou, Muhammad Ibrahim, Bharat Bhushan and Habib Hmam
Sustainability 2021, 13(8), 4541; https://doi.org/10.3390/su13084541 - 19 Apr 2021
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 5487
Abstract
The demand for multimedia content over the Internet protocol network is growing exponentially with Internet users’ growth. Despite high reliability and well-defined infrastructure for Internet protocol communication, Quality of Experience (QoE) is the primary focus of multimedia users while getting multimedia contents with [...] Read more.
The demand for multimedia content over the Internet protocol network is growing exponentially with Internet users’ growth. Despite high reliability and well-defined infrastructure for Internet protocol communication, Quality of Experience (QoE) is the primary focus of multimedia users while getting multimedia contents with flawless or smooth video streaming in less time with high availability. Failure to provide satisfactory QoE results in the churning of the viewers. QoE depends on various factors, such as those related to the network infrastructure that significantly affects perceived quality. Furthermore, the video delivery’s impact also plays an essential role in the overall QoE that can be made efficient by delivering content through specialized content delivery architectures called Content Delivery Networks (CDNs). This article proposes a design that enables effective and efficient streaming, distribution, and caching multimedia content. Moreover, experiments are carried out for the factors impacting QoE, and their behavior is evaluated. The statistical data is taken from real architecture and analysis. Likewise, we have compared the response time and throughput with the varying segment size in adaptive bitrate video streaming. Moreover, resource usage is also analyzed by incorporating the effect of CPU consumption and energy consumption over segment size, which will be counted as effective efforts for sustainable development of multimedia systems. The proposed architecture is validated and indulged as a core component for video streaming based on the use case of a Mobile IPTV solution for 4G/LTE Users. Full article
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<p>System Design of proposed adaptive Bit-rate video architecture.</p>
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<p>Timeline during video playback.</p>
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<p>Adaptive bitrate Video Streaming Architecture.</p>
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<p>Flow Chart of the proposed adaptive bit-rate video architecture.</p>
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<p>Encoding server flow diagram.</p>
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<p>Proposed use case architecture of IPTV service.</p>
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<p>Region of smooth streaming.</p>
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<p>Relation of QoE with Influence Metrics.</p>
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<p>Response time and accumulative time graph with number of users with CDN.</p>
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<p>Response time and accumulative time graph with number of users without CDN.</p>
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<p>Throughput with varying number of users.</p>
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<p>Response time with varying number concerning segment size.</p>
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<p>Effect of segment size over CPU consumption.</p>
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<p>Effect of segment size over energy consumption.</p>
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18 pages, 3122 KiB  
Article
Predictive Model for the Factors Influencing International Project Success: A Data Mining Approach
by Iulia Dumitrașcu-Băldău, Dănuț-Dumitru Dumitrașcu and Gabriela Dobrotă
Sustainability 2021, 13(7), 3819; https://doi.org/10.3390/su13073819 - 31 Mar 2021
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3103
Abstract
Considering that international projects with teams in the virtual environment (IPTVEs) contribute to the reduction in the carbon footprint and, at the same time, become life-saving solutions in extreme global situations, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, organizations familiar with this type of project [...] Read more.
Considering that international projects with teams in the virtual environment (IPTVEs) contribute to the reduction in the carbon footprint and, at the same time, become life-saving solutions in extreme global situations, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, organizations familiar with this type of project will have a substantial advantage in their ability to operate efficiently and to achieve their sustainable goals. An important aspect of project management is to identify the factors that influence the success of an international project, increasing its performance. Our first research hypothesis was that the decision to create a project team in the virtual environment is a factor with a major influence on international project success. Data collection was performed through an online survey conducted within international project team members and managers. The success factors were explained through factorial analysis which revealed two main factors and the neural network algorithm on a dataset through IBM SPSS Modeler software. The predictive model revealed that the most important field is setting up a virtual team, followed by organizational culture. These results support our hypothesis. Full article
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<p>To what extent do you consider that the success of the international project depends on the following aspects? Source: authors.</p>
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<p>In your opinion, what are the main areas that lead to the failure of international projects? (prioritize options). Source: authors.</p>
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<p>The modeling stream on the behavior of factors that influence international project success. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>Data preparation through the Type node. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>Model summary. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>Predictor importance. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>Classification model. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>The neural network—the success of the international project. Source: authors.</p>
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<p>Predictive model evaluation. Source: authors.</p>
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17 pages, 1296 KiB  
Article
Design and Implementation of Fast Spoken Foul Language Recognition with Different End-to-End Deep Neural Network Architectures
by Abdulaziz Saleh Ba Wazir, Hezerul Abdul Karim, Mohd Haris Lye Abdullah, Nouar AlDahoul, Sarina Mansor, Mohammad Faizal Ahmad Fauzi, John See and Ahmad Syazwan Naim
Sensors 2021, 21(3), 710; https://doi.org/10.3390/s21030710 - 21 Jan 2021
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 4007
Abstract
Given the excessive foul language identified in audio and video files and the detrimental consequences to an individual’s character and behaviour, content censorship is crucial to filter profanities from young viewers with higher exposure to uncensored content. Although manual detection and censorship were [...] Read more.
Given the excessive foul language identified in audio and video files and the detrimental consequences to an individual’s character and behaviour, content censorship is crucial to filter profanities from young viewers with higher exposure to uncensored content. Although manual detection and censorship were implemented, the methods proved tedious. Inevitably, misidentifications involving foul language owing to human weariness and the low performance in human visual systems concerning long screening time occurred. As such, this paper proposed an intelligent system for foul language censorship through a mechanized and strong detection method using advanced deep Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) and Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs) through Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) cells. Data on foul language were collected, annotated, augmented, and analysed for the development and evaluation of both CNN and RNN configurations. Hence, the results indicated the feasibility of the suggested systems by reporting a high volume of curse word identifications with only 2.53% to 5.92% of False Negative Rate (FNR). The proposed system outperformed state-of-the-art pre-trained neural networks on the novel foul language dataset and proved to reduce the computational cost with minimal trainable parameters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue VOICE Sensors with Deep Learning)
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<p>Process flow of foul language detection model.</p>
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<p>Spectrogram samples of foul language (40-by-97).</p>
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<p>Impact of noisy data with non-augmented dataset.</p>
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<p>Impact of noisy data with augmented dataset.</p>
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16 pages, 3796 KiB  
Article
A Hybrid QoS-QoE Estimation System for IPTV Service
by Jaroslav Frnda, Jan Nedoma, Jan Vanus and Radek Martinek
Electronics 2019, 8(5), 585; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8050585 - 27 May 2019
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 4403
Abstract
The internet protocol television service (IPTV) has become a key product for internet service providers (ISP), offering several benefits to both ISP and end-users. Because packet networks based on internet protocol have not been prepared for time-sensitive services, such as voice or video, [...] Read more.
The internet protocol television service (IPTV) has become a key product for internet service providers (ISP), offering several benefits to both ISP and end-users. Because packet networks based on internet protocol have not been prepared for time-sensitive services, such as voice or video, packet networks have had to adopt several mechanisms to secure minimal transmission standards in the form of data stream prioritization. There are two commonly used approaches for video quality assessment. The first approach needs an original source for comparison (full-reference objective metrics), and the second one requires observers for subjective evaluation of video quality. Both approaches are impractical in real-time transmission because it is difficult to transform an objective score into a subjective quality perception, and on the other hand, subjective tests are not able to be performed immediately. Since many countries worldwide put IPTV on the same level as other broadcasting systems (e.g., terrestrial, cable, or satellite), IPTV services are subject to regulation by the national regulation authority. This results in the need to prepare service qualitative criteria and monitoring tools capable of measuring end-user satisfaction levels. Our proposed model combines the principles of both assessment approaches, which results in an effective monitoring solution. Therefore, the main contribution of the created system is to offer a monitoring tool able to analyze the features extracted from the video sequence and transmission system and promptly translate their impact into a subjective point of view. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computer Science & Engineering)
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<p>The block diagram of the SSIM index metric.</p>
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<p>Stimulus presentation in the absolute category rating (ACR) method.</p>
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<p>Spatial information (SI) and temporal information (TI) values for UHD video sequences [<a href="#B19-electronics-08-00585" class="html-bibr">19</a>].</p>
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<p>The whole procedure of creation and evaluation of testing video sequences.</p>
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<p>Subjective and objective metric results for the Campfire (<b>a</b>) and Construction (<b>b</b>) scenes.</p>
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<p>Subjective and objective metric results for the Campfire (<b>a</b>) and Construction (<b>b</b>) scenes.</p>
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<p>Subjective and objective metric results for the Runner (<b>a</b>) and Wood (<b>b</b>) scenes.</p>
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<p>Subjective and objective metric results for the Runner (<b>a</b>) and Wood (<b>b</b>) scenes.</p>
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<p>The relative error distribution.</p>
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<p>Four testing video sequences [<a href="#B19-electronics-08-00585" class="html-bibr">19</a>].</p>
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<p>Correlation diagrams for H.264 (<b>a</b>) and H.265 (<b>b</b>).</p>
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1032 KiB  
Article
A Validated Analytical Model for Availability Prediction of IPTV Services in VANETs
by Bernd E. Wolfinger, Arian Hübner and Sadaf Momeni
Electronics 2014, 3(4), 689-711; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics3040689 - 19 Dec 2014
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 6322
Abstract
In vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), besides the original applications typically related to traffic safety, we nowadays can observe an increasing trend toward infotainment applications, such as IPTV services. Quality of experience (QoE), as observed by the end users of IPTV, is highly [...] Read more.
In vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), besides the original applications typically related to traffic safety, we nowadays can observe an increasing trend toward infotainment applications, such as IPTV services. Quality of experience (QoE), as observed by the end users of IPTV, is highly important to guarantee adequate user acceptance for the service. In IPTV, QoE is mainly determined by the availability of TV channels for the users. This paper presents an efficient and rather generally applicable analytical model that allows one to predict the blocking probability of TV channels, both for channel-switching-induced, as well as for handover-induced blocking events. We present the successful validation of the model by means of simulation, and we introduce a new measure for QoE. Numerous case studies illustrate how the analytical model and our new QoE measure can be applied successfully for the dimensioning of IPTV systems, taking into account the QoE requirements of the IPTV service users in strongly diverse traffic scenarios. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Connected Vehicles, V2V Communications, and VANET)
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<p>Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) networks.</p>
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<p>Main components of a VANET-based IPTV system.</p>
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<p><math display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>b</mi> <mi>p</mi> <msub> <mi>h</mi> <mi>s</mi> </msub> </mrow> </math> dependent on the number of offered channels for different traffic scenarios for both analytical models.</p>
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<p><math display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>b</mi> <mi>p</mi> <msub> <mi>h</mi> <mi>h</mi> </msub> <mrow> <mo>(</mo> <msub> <mi>v</mi> <mi>i</mi> </msub> <mo>)</mo> </mrow> </mrow> </math> dependent on the number of offered channels for distinct lanes of different traffic scenarios in the early period model.</p>
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<p><math display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>b</mi> <mi>p</mi> <msub> <mi>h</mi> <mi>h</mi> </msub> <mrow> <mo>(</mo> <msub> <mi>v</mi> <mi>i</mi> </msub> <mo>)</mo> </mrow> </mrow> </math> dependent on the number of offered channels for distinct lanes of different traffic scenarios in the late period model.</p>
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<p><math display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>b</mi> <mi>p</mi> <msub> <mi>h</mi> <mi>s</mi> </msub> </mrow> </math> and <math display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>b</mi> <mi>p</mi> <msub> <mi>h</mi> <mi>h</mi> </msub> <mrow> <mo>(</mo> <msub> <mi>v</mi> <mi>i</mi> </msub> <mo>)</mo> </mrow> </mrow> </math> for different cell sizes and different speeds of vehicles (both for the early and late period of the scenarios observed).</p>
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545 KiB  
Article
Evolution of the Converged NGN Service Platforms Towards Future Networks
by Eugen Mikóczy, Ivan Kotuliak and Oskar van Deventer
Future Internet 2011, 3(1), 67-86; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi3010067 - 4 Mar 2011
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 10204
Abstract
This article presents a comparison of main characteristics of the Next Generation Networks (NGN) and Future Generation Internet (FGI). The aim is to discuss and compare two approaches to Future Networks (FN) and services: the evolution of NGN, and the revolutionary approach of [...] Read more.
This article presents a comparison of main characteristics of the Next Generation Networks (NGN) and Future Generation Internet (FGI). The aim is to discuss and compare two approaches to Future Networks (FN) and services: the evolution of NGN, and the revolutionary approach of a new FGI. We present both frameworks from the services point of view as they are delivered to the end-user, as well as from the architectural point of view. We compare selected properties of both approaches to explain commonalities and differences. Their challenges are similar: managing the quality of experience, mobility, security, scalability and providing openness to applications. Based on this comparison, we evaluate possible areas for future convergence in the approach of the two architectures to the Future Network concept. Our analysis shows that despite their different backgrounds, the internet’s FGI and telco’s NGN are not that different after all. The convergence of the two approaches therefore seems the only logical way forward. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Network vs. Application Based Solutions for NGN)
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<p>Structure of this document.</p>
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<p>Principle for layered architecture of NGN (integrated services, control and packet routing over wide variety of access technologies).</p>
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<p>Principle for evolution approach from telco view.</p>
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<p>Principle for layered architecture of Future Network [<a href="#b15-futureinternet-03-00067" class="html-bibr">15</a>].</p>
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<p>Complexity of protocol stack in NGN and Internet.</p>
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224 KiB  
Article
Exploiting the In-Network Capabilities of Multicast to Discover Proximate IPTV Channels
by Chamil Kulatunga, Jesse Kielthy, Dmitri Botvich and William Donnelly
Future Internet 2010, 2(4), 431-445; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi2040431 - 29 Sep 2010
Viewed by 8339
Abstract
IPTV has become the next generation of television due, in part, to its ability to support features that have been lacking in conventional broadcasting—for example, end-user interactivity, personalisation and localisation. Providers are also searching for the most efficient delivery methods to provide the [...] Read more.
IPTV has become the next generation of television due, in part, to its ability to support features that have been lacking in conventional broadcasting—for example, end-user interactivity, personalisation and localisation. Providers are also searching for the most efficient delivery methods to provide the greatest amount of contents at the lowest cost. At present IPTV uses IP multicast to deliver live TV channels in an over-provisioned walled-garden network due to issues of deploying multicast and QoS challenges in the public Internet. However, IPTV is likely to shift into some parts of the public Internet in the future as a managed service. Multicast routing is performed on a per-session destination-address basis so each router maintains a table of all of the multicast addresses to which the content is being forwarded. We exploit this information to discover and join the in-progress channels of geographically proximate users and to create a new incentivised premium service in future IPTV networks called ProxyTV. This approach is expected to minimise network bandwidth requirements as it enables ISPs to optimise bandwidth on their edge networks. This becomes increasingly significant as TV content consumes more and more bandwidth, especially with the onset of HD and 3D capabilities. In this paper, we have presented in detail the concept with the results of a survey and an analysis of network traffic to justify the proposed approach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Network vs. Application Based Solutions for NGN)
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<p>Existence of an edge network bottleneck.</p>
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<p>Routing in IP multicast.</p>
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<p>Query steps of the proximity discovery system.</p>
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<p>Survey results (45 users). a. (top) A non-premium content; b. (bottom) A premium content.</p>
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<p>Statistical performances with and without <span class="html-italic">ProxyTV</span> (100 Mbps link bandwidth). a. (top) Receiving rate; b. (middle) Packet loss rate; c. (bottom) Multicast sessions.</p>
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<p>Statistical performances with and without <span class="html-italic">ProxyTV</span> (200 Mbps link bandwidth). a. (top) Receiving rate; b. (middle) Packet loss rate; c. (bottom) Multicast sessions.</p>
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1021 KiB  
Article
Implementing Value Added Applications in Next Generation Networks
by Yeh-Chin Ho, Yi-Bing Lin, Ren-Huang Liou and Yuan-Kuang Tu
Future Internet 2010, 2(3), 282-294; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi2030282 - 6 Aug 2010
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 10677
Abstract
One of the major issues in the future Internet is the integration of telecom networks with the Internet. In many countries, large Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are also telecom operators that have been focusing on providing Internet services through their telecom networks with [...] Read more.
One of the major issues in the future Internet is the integration of telecom networks with the Internet. In many countries, large Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are also telecom operators that have been focusing on providing Internet services through their telecom networks with telecom-grade mechanisms. In this article, we show that IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a telecom-grade mechanism that addresses this important issue. In Next Generation Network (NGN), IMS supports IP-based multimedia services that can be accessed from various wireless and wired access technologies through fixed-mobile convergence. We show how to integrate Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) with NGN/IMS to offer enhanced IPTV services for subscribers with set-top boxes or mobile phones. We specifically describe the implementations of three services: weather forecasts, short messages on TV screens and TV shopping/food ordering for mobile users. Although these services can be directly implemented in the Internet, our commercial operation experiences indicate that the NGN/IMS implementation has advantages in terms of telecom-grade security, Quality of Service (QoS), and flexible service creation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Network vs. Application Based Solutions for NGN)
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<p>The NGN/IMS Architecture.</p>
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<p>The IPTV-CS Architecture.</p>
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<p>IMS Registration.</p>
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<p>Location Information Message Flow.</p>
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<p>Weather Forecast Service.</p>
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<p>Message flow of the weather information.</p>
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<p>Message flow of SMS on TV screen.</p>
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<p>Message flow for TV shopping/food ordering.</p>
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