SAATCHI, Reza and ABDUSSALAM, Salama (2020). Quality of Service in IEEE 802.11ac and 802.11n Wireless Protocols with Applications in Medical Environments. In: BELL, Andrew, GELMAN, Len and RAO, B.K.N., (eds.) Advances in Asset Management and Condition Monitoring, COMADEM 2019. Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies (166). Springer, 1345-1358. [Book Section]
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Saatchi_QualityServiceIEEE(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License All rights reserved.
Saatchi_QualityServiceIEEE(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License All rights reserved.
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Abstract
Wireless computer networks are increasingly important as reliable
means of communication in medical environments. Evaluation of Quality of
Service (QoS) in wireless computer networks deployed in medical environments
can improve network performance and enhance utilization of resources. In this
study, the QoS offered by IEEE 802.11n and IEEE 802.11ac wireless protocols
was evaluated and compared using multiple point-to-point links for Voice Over
Internet Protocol (VoIP) traffic. QoS was evaluated based on Predictive Statistical
Diagnosis (PSD) and Probabilistic Neural Network (PNN). PSD and PNN based
QoS evaluation methods categorized the VoIP packets into low, medium and high
QoS types based on the packets' transmission delay, jitter, and percentage packet
loss ratio. Both PSD and PNN allowed QoS for VoIP to be quantified accurately.
It was shown that 802.11ac provides a higher QoS for VoIP transmission as
compared with IEEE 802.11n. The devised methods can be used in medical
environments for evaluation of wireless networks' QoS.
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