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  <contributor personID="king" />
  <author personID="king" />
  <author personID="haenselmann" />
  <author personID="kopf" />
  <author personID="effelsberg" />
  <title>A Measurement Study on 802.11 Concurrently Used for
  Positioning and Communications</title>
  <conference>
    <name>International Symposium on Wireless Pervasive
    Computing</name>
    <publisher>IEEE</publisher>
    <booktitle>Proc. of the Third International Symposium on
    Wireless Pervasive Computing (ISWPC 2008)</booktitle>
    <organization></organization>
    <location>Santorini, Greece</location>
  </conference>
  <year>2008</year>
  <month>05</month>
  <abstract lang="en">Not only the communication capabilities of
  802.11, but also the capability to determine the position of
  mobile devices make 802.11 highly appealing for many application
  areas. Typically, a mobile device that wants to know its position
  regularly performs active or passive scans to obtain signal
  strength measurements of neighboring access points. Active and
  passive scanning are survey techniques originally intended to be
  performed once in a while to learn about the presence and signal
  reception quality of access points within communication range.
  However, so far, no investigations are known to have been
  launched into how regular scanning affects concurrent data
  transmissions from an end-user point of view. In this paper, we
  explore how common data communication is affected while actively
  or passively scanning at the same time. We found that with an
  active scanning interval of equal or greater than two seconds the
  network conditions such as throughput and round trip delay are
  sufficient for interactive network applications. The use of
  passive scanning is prohibitive while simultaneously performing
  interactive data communication due to communication dropouts of
  more than 1.3 seconds during each scan.</abstract>
  <pages type="print">610-615</pages>
</publication>
