Mobile, pervasive, and autonomous communication technologies (MPACT) Lab is located at the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department of North Carolina State University. As its name suggests, our lab conducts research in three broad areas of communication technologies.

  • Mobile: 4G LTE and 5G wireless networks, mmWave communications, wireless localization, interference/mobility management, propagation measurements/modeling, public safety communications.
  • Pervasive: Heterogeneous and small cell networks, network densification, Internet of things (IoT), unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) communications, visible light communications, UWB/mmWave radars.
  • Autonomous: Cognitive radio, spectrum sharing, UAV autonomous deployment/navigation, occupancy monitoring, smart cities, cyber-physical systems.
We use fundamental tools from communication theory, detection and estimation, optimization, machine learning, and statistics in addressing research challenges in these three broad areas. We utilize software defined radios, UWB/mmWave/WiFi radios, and UAVs, to develop experimental and proof-of-concept platforms for our research.

News

[12/22/2016] Globecom Conference at Washington, DC

[12/22/2016] Globecom Conference at Washington, DC

MPACT Lab joined to IEEE Globecom Conference in Washington, D.C. Three of our members presented their papers, while other researchers have volunteered in the conference, and also joined the sessions to get more information about the latest research in wireless...

[12/15/2016] Thanksgiving Dinner at Dr. Guvenc’s house

[12/15/2016] Thanksgiving Dinner at Dr. Guvenc’s house

MPACT lab was invited to Dr. Guvenc’s house for Thanksgiving dinner. Young researchers had fun time while enjoying the feast. It was a great Thanksgiving dinner and nice atmosphere. Traditional Thanksgiving menu was enriched by the best Turkish dishes. After the...

[10/1/2016] Dr. Sener Dikmese has joined the MPACT Lab

Dr. Sener Dikmese has joined the MPACT Lab as a postdoctoral researcher. His main research areas are cognitive radio, spectrum sensing, 5G, energy detection, and resource allocation. Previously he worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Electronics...

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