We discuss ISDB (Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting) which has a transport structure to meet the technical requirements such as the flexibility and the extensibility of broadcasting in the future. The basic configuration of the ISDB transmission signal for distribution into various transmission channels is shown. Hybrid multiplexing, which uses common fixed-length packets and structured transmission units called "slots," is introduced to construct a transmission signal for low-cost signal processing in ISDB receivers. We show that a fixed packet length of 40-240 bytes results in high transmission efficiency in a diverse range of service arrangements. Furthermore, we use transmission control methods, which show the relationship between programs and packet IDs, to select the desired program with certainty and ease.
The copyright of the original papers published on this site belongs to IEICE. Unauthorized use of the original or translated papers is prohibited. See IEICE Provisions on Copyright for details.
Copy
Naoki KAWAI, Kouji OHSAKI, Takeshi KIMURA, Seiichi NAMBA, "Transport Structure for Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications,
vol. E77-B, no. 12, pp. 1474-1479, December 1994, doi: .
Abstract: We discuss ISDB (Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting) which has a transport structure to meet the technical requirements such as the flexibility and the extensibility of broadcasting in the future. The basic configuration of the ISDB transmission signal for distribution into various transmission channels is shown. Hybrid multiplexing, which uses common fixed-length packets and structured transmission units called "slots," is introduced to construct a transmission signal for low-cost signal processing in ISDB receivers. We show that a fixed packet length of 40-240 bytes results in high transmission efficiency in a diverse range of service arrangements. Furthermore, we use transmission control methods, which show the relationship between programs and packet IDs, to select the desired program with certainty and ease.
URL: https://globals.ieice.org/en_transactions/communications/10.1587/e77-b_12_1474/_p
Copy
@ARTICLE{e77-b_12_1474,
author={Naoki KAWAI, Kouji OHSAKI, Takeshi KIMURA, Seiichi NAMBA, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications},
title={Transport Structure for Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting},
year={1994},
volume={E77-B},
number={12},
pages={1474-1479},
abstract={We discuss ISDB (Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting) which has a transport structure to meet the technical requirements such as the flexibility and the extensibility of broadcasting in the future. The basic configuration of the ISDB transmission signal for distribution into various transmission channels is shown. Hybrid multiplexing, which uses common fixed-length packets and structured transmission units called "slots," is introduced to construct a transmission signal for low-cost signal processing in ISDB receivers. We show that a fixed packet length of 40-240 bytes results in high transmission efficiency in a diverse range of service arrangements. Furthermore, we use transmission control methods, which show the relationship between programs and packet IDs, to select the desired program with certainty and ease.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={December},}
Copy
TY - JOUR
TI - Transport Structure for Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SP - 1474
EP - 1479
AU - Naoki KAWAI
AU - Kouji OHSAKI
AU - Takeshi KIMURA
AU - Seiichi NAMBA
PY - 1994
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SN -
VL - E77-B
IS - 12
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Y1 - December 1994
AB - We discuss ISDB (Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting) which has a transport structure to meet the technical requirements such as the flexibility and the extensibility of broadcasting in the future. The basic configuration of the ISDB transmission signal for distribution into various transmission channels is shown. Hybrid multiplexing, which uses common fixed-length packets and structured transmission units called "slots," is introduced to construct a transmission signal for low-cost signal processing in ISDB receivers. We show that a fixed packet length of 40-240 bytes results in high transmission efficiency in a diverse range of service arrangements. Furthermore, we use transmission control methods, which show the relationship between programs and packet IDs, to select the desired program with certainty and ease.
ER -