Arne A. Nilsson

Also published under:A. Nilsson, A. A. Nilsson

Affiliation

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA

Topic

Wireless Networks,Mobile Users,Performance Metrics,Simulation Results,Throughput,Wireless Local Area Network,Access Control,Access Network,Ad Hoc Networks,Adjustment Algorithm,Admission Control,Allocation Scheme,Analytical Results,Appended,Array Size,Arrival Rate,Authentication Protocol,Average Bit,Average Energy Consumption,Bandwidth Allocation,Beginning Of Interval,Bitrate,Bitstream,Blocking Probability,Bloom Filter,Called Blocks,Capacity Of System,Cellular Networks,Computational Overhead,Constant Interval,Correct Location,Cybersecurity,Defense Structures,Denial Of Service,Deployment Of Systems,Drop Probability,Energy Conservation,Energy Consumption,Energy Consumption Rate,Energy Efficiency,Energy Transmission,Expensive Resources,Exponential Decay,Extensive Simulations,False Positive,False Positive Rate,Federal Communications Commission,Filter Function,Finite Resources,First Line Of Defense,

Biography

Arne A. Nilsson is a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at North Carolina State University (NCSU), Raleigh, NC, USA. He obtained the Master of Electrical Engineering in 1968, the Ph.D. in Telecommunication Systems in 1976, both at the Lund University of Technology, Lund, Sweden. Dr. Nilsson has more than 30 years of experience with telecommunication networks. He was a graduate student at UCLA during the early development of the ARPA net. He was a principal investigator for the Swedish Telecommunication Ad-ministration in the effort to build a Nordic packet switched network. He joined the faculty at NCSU in 1978. In 1986 he was a professor at ITA, Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil. He was professor of Telecommunications Systems at KTH, Stockholm, Sweden in 1986 and 87. In 1987 he was promoted to the rank of a senior professor at NCSU. He was on the committee responsible for the design and architecture of the MCNC data and video network in North Carolina. The VISTAnet that was one of five gigabit test beds saw him as one of the Principal Investigators. He has been an active participant the industry/university cooperative research center on communications and signal processing at NCSU. In addition he has recently been asked to perform the duties of external evaluator for some of the European efforts in high-speed networking. The US Army Research Office has also used this expertise in the wireless network engineering area.