| Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia, "Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques," Performance Evaluation, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 11--18, Feb. 1984. |
....including both with and without silence suppression. Additionally as far as we know, no one has used real trace data to enhance and verify their models to the level we show. Some early analytical work on the buffer size requirements for packetised voice is nicely summarised by Gopal et al. [1]. One often cited piece of work is Barberis [2] As part of this work he assumes the delays experienced by packets of the same talkspurt are i.i.d according to an exponential distribution p(t) #e #T where 1 # is the average network delay and standard deviation. M.K. Mehmet al.i et al. in their ....
Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia, "Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques," Performance Evaluation, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 11--18, Feb. 1984.
....media content and transmit it via the network as packets at regular intervals. The receiver gets the media packets and schedules an appropriate playout time in order to produce a smooth output media stream. It compensates for the delay variation (jitter) using a playout delay adjustment algorithm [7, 16, 14, 3, 2]. Simple algorithms use a xed playout delay, either static or determined at the start of a session. More advanced VoIP applications compute a di erent playout delay for each talk spurt [4] adaptively according to the current network condition. The quality of multimedia applications is primarily ....
Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia. Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques. Performance Evaluation, 4(1):11-18, February 1984.
....play times of all packets form a line y = x 13. An alternative de nition of playout delay is the delay between sending time and playout time. The reader can choose either of the two de nitions as long as its meaning is clear. Many techniques have been developed for controlling playout delay [13] [36] 28] 7] 6] etc. Simple ones use a xed playout delay, either static or determined at the start of a session. More advanced techniques exploit the existence of talk spurts (speech) and pauses (silence) 8] in human speech. The length distribution of talk spurts and pauses depends on ....
Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia. Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques. Performance Evaluation, 4(1):11-18, February 1984.
....play times of all packets form a line # = # 13. An alternative de nition of playout delay is the delaybetween sending time and playout time. The reader can choose either of the two de nitions as long as its meaning is clear. Many techniques have been developed for controlling playout delay [13] [36] 28] 7] 6] etc. Simple ones use a xed playout delay, either static or determined at the start of a session. More advanced techniques exploit the existence of talk spurts (speech) and pauses (silence) 8]inhuman speech. The length distribution of talk spurts and pauses depends on silence ....
Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia. Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques. ########### ##########, 4(1):11-18, February 1984.
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Prabandham M. Gopal, J. W. Wong, and J. C. Majithia, "Analysis of playout strategies for voice transmission using packet switching techniques," Performance Evaluation, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 11--18, Feb. 1984.
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