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Gregory W. Wornell

Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publications -  364
Citations -  37714

Gregory W. Wornell is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Communication channel & Decoding methods. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 349 publications receiving 36388 citations. Previous affiliations of Gregory W. Wornell include Hebrew University of Jerusalem & MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cooperative diversity in wireless networks: Efficient protocols and outage behavior

TL;DR: Using distributed antennas, this work develops and analyzes low-complexity cooperative diversity protocols that combat fading induced by multipath propagation in wireless networks and develops performance characterizations in terms of outage events and associated outage probabilities, which measure robustness of the transmissions to fading.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed space-time-coded protocols for exploiting cooperative diversity in wireless networks

TL;DR: This work develops and analyzes space-time coded cooperative diversity protocols for combating multipath fading across multiple protocol layers in a wireless network and demonstrates that these protocols achieve full spatial diversity in the number of cooperating terminals, not just theNumber of decoding relays, and can be used effectively for higher spectral efficiencies than repetition-based schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantization index modulation: a class of provably good methods for digital watermarking and information embedding

TL;DR: It is shown that QIM is "provably good" against arbitrary bounded and fully informed attacks, and achieves provably better rate distortion-robustness tradeoffs than currently popular spread-spectrum and low-bit(s) modulation methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Secure Transmission With Multiple Antennas—Part II: The MIMOME Wiretap Channel

TL;DR: The role of multiple antennas for secure communication is investigated within the framework of Wyner's wiretap channel, and a masked beamforming scheme that radiates power isotropically in all directions attains near-optimal performance in the high SNR regime.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Energy-efficient antenna sharing and relaying for wireless networks

TL;DR: All of the antenna sharing protocols offer diversity gains over single-hop and multihop transmission, and the results suggest that low-complexity amplifying and forwarding is energy-efficient in spite of noise amplification at the relay.