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Tag Identification and Estimation in RFID Systems
PhD Qualifying Examination Title: "Tag Identification and Estimation in RFID Systems" by Mr. Haoxiang Liu Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology is increasingly used in object tracking, inventory control, supply management etc. A typical RFID system consists of multiple readers and tags, where each tag is assigned a unique ID and attached to an object. An RFID reader can remotely collect +tag IDs for tag identification. There are two major fundamental problems in RFID systems, namely how to efficiently identify the tag IDs and how to rapidly count the number of tags especially in a large scale RFID system. The standard MAC-layer tag identification protocol is based on framed slotted ALOHA (FSA), which is inefficient in essence. FSA can achieve a maximum identification efficiency of 1/e = 36.8%. Specifically, a maximum of 36.8% of tags can be identified in one round of identification. To improve the identification efficiency of FSA, a number of approaches are proposed, either using MAC layer or physical layer techniques. Counting the number of tags can be trivially accomplished by identifying each of the tags. This approach, however, takes too long time especially in large scale RFID systems. Rather than count precisely, we can derive an estimation of tag set cardinality using much quicker methods. The majority of tag cardinality estimation schemes adopt statistical methods and usually several rounds of estimation are required to approximate the fixed precision. In this survey, we will review a series of tag identification and cardinality estimation methods primarily in single-reader-multi-tag scenario.The identification and estimation efficiency of different protocols will also be presented. Date: Wednesday, 9 January 2013 Time: 4:00pm - 6:00pm Venue: Room 3501 lifts 25/26 Committee Members: Dr. Yunhao Liu (Supervisor) Dr. Ke Yi (Supervisor) Prof. James Kwok (Chairperson) Dr. Lei Chen **** ALL are Welcome ****