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    Design and Analysis of Authentication Protocols in Vehicular ad-hoc Networks

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Kazemi Dizaj, Mitra (Author) ; Salmasizadeh, Mahmoud (Supervisor) ; Mohajeri, Javad (Co-Supervisor)
    Abstract
    Design of anonymous authentication scheme is one of the most important challenges in Vehicular Ad hoc Networks (VANET). Most of the existing schemes have high computational and communication overhead and they do not meet security requirements. Recently, Azees et al. have introduced an Efficient Anonymous Authentication with Conditional Privacy-Preserving (EAAP) scheme for VANET and claimed that it is secure. We show that this protocol is vulnerable against replay attack, impersonation attack and message modification attack. Also, we show that the messages sent by a vehicle are linkable. Therefore, an adversary can easily track the vehicles. In addition, it is shown that vehicles face with... 

    Modeling of J sc and V oc versus the grain size in CdTe, CZTS and Perovskite thin film solar cells

    , Article Superlattices and Microstructures ; Volume 128 , 2019 , Pages 421-427 ; 07496036 (ISSN) Nazem, H ; Pourasiab Dizaj, H ; Gorji, N. E ; Sharif University of Technology
    Academic Press  2019
    Abstract
    A modeling approach is presented for the first time to model the dependence of short-circuit current density (J sc ) and open-circuit voltage (V oc ) on the grain size g in three thin film solar cells including the emerging perovskites. The variation of J sc and V oc with the grain size (g) of three different solar cells with CdTe, CZTS and perovskite absorber layers are modelled and fitted with the experimental dataset collected from relevant literature. The experimental literature suggested that the grain size of absorber layers in solar cells is controlled during the deposition process by adjusting the growth rate, temperature and ambient. The model has been successfully applied to the... 

    Estimation Elasticity of Calorie and Macronutrients with Respect to Income in the Islamic Republic of Iran, 2008-2016

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Hosseinpour, Mitra Sadat (Author) ; Vesal, Mohammad (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    Inadequate nutrition is perhaps the most important problem facing the poor. Being hungry lowers productivity and decreases individuals’ income. All of these factors conspire to help the poor stay poor. Raising the income of the poor is one solution for this problem if the elasticity of calorie and macronutrients with respect to income is greater than zero. This study employs both nonparametric and parametric methods to obtain the elasticity of per capita calorie and macronutrients with respect to household per capita expenditure. The case presented is for urban areas of Islamic republic of Iran, 2008-2016. Under each estimation strategy we employ, we find a strongly significant and positive... 

    Towards high data-rate diffusive molecular communications: A review on performance enhancement strategies

    , Article Digital Signal Processing: A Review Journal ; 2021 ; 10512004 (ISSN) Gursoy, M. C ; Nasiri-Kenari, M ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier Inc  2021
    Abstract
    Diffusive molecular communications (DiMC) have recently gained attention as a candidate for nano- to micro- and macro-scale communications due to its simplicity and energy efficiency. As signal propagation is solely enabled by Brownian motion mechanics, DiMC faces severe inter-symbol interference (ISI), which limits reliable and high data-rate communications. Herein, recent literature on DiMC performance enhancement strategies is surveyed; key research directions are identified. Signaling design and associated design constraints are presented. Studies on fundamental information theoretic limits of DiMC channel are reviewed. Classical and novel transceiver designs are discussed with an... 

    Towards high data-rate diffusive molecular communications: A review on performance enhancement strategies

    , Article Digital Signal Processing: A Review Journal ; Volume 124 , 2022 ; 10512004 (ISSN) Gursoy, M. C ; Nasiri Kenari, M ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier Inc  2022
    Abstract
    Diffusive molecular communications (DiMC) have recently gained attention as a candidate for nano- to micro- and macro-scale communications due to its simplicity and energy efficiency. As signal propagation is solely enabled by Brownian motion mechanics, DiMC faces severe inter-symbol interference (ISI), which limits reliable and high data-rate communications. Herein, recent literature on DiMC performance enhancement strategies is surveyed; key research directions are identified. Signaling design and associated design constraints are presented. Studies on fundamental information theoretic limits of DiMC channel are reviewed. Classical and novel transceiver designs are discussed with an... 

    Ant colony algorithm for the shortest loop design problem [electronic resource]

    , Article Computers and Industrial Engineering, Elsevier ; Volume 50, Issue 4, August 2006, Pages 358–366 Eshghi, K. (Kourosh) ; Kazemi, Morteza ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    In this paper, a new algorithm for solving the shortest loop design problem is presented. The shortest loop design problem is to find the shortest loop for an automated guided vehicle covering at least one edge of each department of a block layout. In this paper, first it is shown that this problem can be represented as a graph model. The properties of the presented model enable us to design a meta-heuristic based on ant colony system algorithm for solving the shortest loop design problem. Computational results show the efficiency of our algorithm in compare to the other techniques  

    Propositional attitudes as commitments: unleashing some constraints

    , Article Dialogue-Canadian Philosophical Review ; Volume 59, Issue 3 , 2020 , Pages 437-457 Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Cambridge University Press  2020
    Abstract
    In a series of articles, Asbjorn Steglich-Petersen and Nick Zangwill argue that, since propositional attitude (PA) ascription judgements do not behave like normative judgements in being subject to a priori normative supervenience and the Because Constraint, PAs cannot be constitutively normative.1 I argue that, for a specific version of normativism, according to which PAs are normative commitments, these arguments fail. To this end, I argue that commitments and obligations should be distinguished. Then, I show that the intuitions allegedly governing all normative judgements do not even purport to hold for commitment-attributing judgements. Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 2020  

    Commitment, norm-governedness and guidance

    , Article Acta Analytica ; 2020 Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Springer  2020
    Abstract
    A number of philosophers have argued that there is a basic problem in the no-guidance argument against content normativism. The problem is that the argument restricts the essential normativity of intentional states to the formation of these states being guided by certain norms. But it is suggested that the essential norm-governedness of intentional states can be equally plausibly construed as the assessability of these states by norms, which does not imply complying with them. Although I concur with the problem diagnosed in the no-guidance argument, I take issue with the alternative conception of normativity which is put forward. In its stead, I argue that considering intentional states as... 

    Commitment, norm-governedness and guidance

    , Article Acta Analytica ; Volume 36, Issue 2 , 2021 , Pages 213-228 ; 03535150 (ISSN) Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Springer Science and Business Media B.V  2021
    Abstract
    A number of philosophers have argued that there is a basic problem in the no-guidance argument against content normativism. The problem is that the argument restricts the essential normativity of intentional states to the formation of these states being guided by certain norms. But it is suggested that the essential norm-governedness of intentional states can be equally plausibly construed as the assessability of these states by norms, which does not imply complying with them. Although I concur with the problem diagnosed in the no-guidance argument, I take issue with the alternative conception of normativity which is put forward. In its stead, I argue that considering intentional states as... 

    Causal relations and abraham’s dilemma: a Qur’anic perspective

    , Article Sophia ; 2021 ; 00381527 (ISSN) Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Springer Science and Business Media B.V  2021
    Abstract
    Abraham’s Dilemma is the conjunction of three jointly inconsistent propositions: (i) God’s commands are never morally wrong, (ii) God has commanded Abraham to kill his innocent son, and (iii) killing innocent people is morally wrong. Drawing on an overlooked point from the Qur’an regarding the content of the command as well as a conceptual analysis of intentional action, this paper proposes a novel solution to the dilemma by discarding proposition (ii) in a new way. Current approaches to rejecting proposition (ii) tend to appeal to epistemic failure on the side of Abraham. In my approach, which draws on the so-called accordion effect in intentional action, God’s command is interpreted in... 

    Still committed to the normativity of folk psychology

    , Article Philosophical Explorations ; 2021 ; 13869795 (ISSN) Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Routledge  2021
    Abstract
    In what sense can one claim that intentional explanations are essentially normative, given that people’s actions and thinking are replete with various irrationalities, yet are still pretty well explained by this explanatory framework? This article provides a novel response to this enduring objection. First, following Brandom, it is suggested that, to understand the normativity of intentional states, we should countenance and distinguish between two normative categories of commitment and entitlement, only the former of which is argued to be essential for intentional explanations. Conflating these two normative dimensions is noted to be one of the main sources of the objections leveled against... 

    Causal relations and abraham’s dilemma: a Qur’anic perspective

    , Article Sophia ; Volume 61, Issue 2 , 2022 , Pages 309-318 ; 00381527 (ISSN) Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Springer Science and Business Media B.V  2022
    Abstract
    Abraham’s Dilemma is the conjunction of three jointly inconsistent propositions: (i) God’s commands are never morally wrong, (ii) God has commanded Abraham to kill his innocent son, and (iii) killing innocent people is morally wrong. Drawing on an overlooked point from the Qur’an regarding the content of the command as well as a conceptual analysis of intentional action, this paper proposes a novel solution to the dilemma by discarding proposition (ii) in a new way. Current approaches to rejecting proposition (ii) tend to appeal to epistemic failure on the side of Abraham. In my approach, which draws on the so-called accordion effect in intentional action, God’s command is interpreted in... 

    Still committed to the normativity of folk psychology

    , Article Philosophical Explorations ; Volume 25, Issue 1 , 2022 , Pages 58-74 ; 13869795 (ISSN) Kazemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Routledge  2022
    Abstract
    In what sense can one claim that intentional explanations are essentially normative, given that people’s actions and thinking are replete with various irrationalities, yet are still pretty well explained by this explanatory framework? This article provides a novel response to this enduring objection. First, following Brandom, it is suggested that, to understand the normativity of intentional states, we should countenance and distinguish between two normative categories of commitment and entitlement, only the former of which is argued to be essential for intentional explanations. Conflating these two normative dimensions is noted to be one of the main sources of the objections leveled against... 

    Diffusion based molecular communication: A simple near optimal receiver

    , Article IWCIT 2014 - Iran Workshop on Communication and Information Theory ; 7-8 May , 2014 ; Print ISBN: 9781479948789 Mosayebi, R ; Arjmandi, H ; Gohari, A ; Kenari, M. N ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    2014
    Abstract
    Nanonetworking indicates new solutions for many applications in biomedical and industrial fields. In this paper, we examine the diffusion-based molecular communication for information transmission in nano-networks. Design of practical decoders for resource-limited nano-networks requires an understanding the fundamental performance limits of memory-limited decoders. While some existing works in the literature do consider decoders with limited memory, to best of our knowledge, the tradeoff between memory and probability of error has not been studied in the literature. In this paper we make a first step by studying this tradeoff for a particular molecular communication channel between two... 

    Receivers for diffusion-based molecular communication: Exploiting memory and sampling rate

    , Article IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications ; Vol. 32, issue. 12 , 2014 , pp. 2368-2380 ; ISSN: 07338716 Mosayebi, R ; Arjmandi, H ; Gohari, A ; Nasiri-Kenari, M ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    2014
    Abstract
    In this paper, a diffusion-based molecular communication channel between two nano-machines is considered. The effect of the amount of memory on performance is characterized, and a simple memory-limited decoder is proposed; its performance is shown to be close to that of the best possible decoder (without any restrictions on the computational complexity or its functional form), using genie-aided upper bounds. This effect is adapted to the case of Molecular Concentration Shift Keying; it is shown that a four-bit memory achieves nearly the same performance as infinite memory for all of the examples considered. A general class of threshold decoders is considered and shown to be suboptimal for a... 

    Capacity of LTI-Poisson channel for diffusion based molecular communication

    , Article IEEE International Conference on Communications, ICC 2015, 8 June 2015 through 12 June 2015 ; Volume 2015-September , June , 2015 , Pages 1060-1065 ; 15503607 (ISSN) ; 9781467364324 (ISBN) Aminian, G ; Arjmandi, H ; Gohari, A ; Kenari, M. N ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc  2015
    Abstract
    The LTI-Poisson model is a natural extension of the conventional memoryless Poisson channel to include memory, and can model the ISI effect in diffusion based molecular communication networks. In this paper, we exploit prior art on linear ISI channels to provide a computable finite-letter characterization of the capacity of single-hop LTI-Poisson networks. Then we find more explicit single-letter lower and upper bounds on the capacity in the point to point case. Further, an approach for bounding mutual information in the low SNR regime using the symmetrized KL divergence is introduced and its applicability for Poisson channels is demonstrated. This leads to a non-trivial upper bound on the... 

    Adaptive molecule transmission rate for diffusion based molecular communication

    , Article IEEE International Conference on Communications, ICC 2015, 8 June 2015 through 12 June 2015 ; Volume 2015-September , June , 2015 , Pages 1066-1071 ; 15503607 (ISSN) ; 9781467364324 (ISBN) Movahednasab, M ; Soleimanifar, M ; Gohari, A ; Kenari, M. N ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc  2015
    Abstract
    In this paper, a simple memory limited transmitter for molecular communication is proposed, in which information is encoded in the diffusion rate of the molecules. Taking advantage of memory, the proposed transmitter reduces the ISI problem by properly adjusting its diffusion rate. The error probability of the proposed scheme is derived and the result is compared with the lower bound on error probability of the optimum transmitter. It is shown that the performance of introduced transmitter is near optimal (under certain simplifications). Simplicity is the key feature of the presented communication system: the transmitter follows a simple rule, the receiver is a simple threshold decoder and... 

    Adaptive Transmission Rate with a Fixed Threshold Decoder for Diffusion-Based Molecular Communication

    , Article IEEE Transactions on Communications ; Volume 64, Issue 1 , 2016 , Pages 236-248 ; 00906778 (ISSN) Movahednasab, M ; Soleimanifar, M ; Gohari, A ; Nasiri Kenari, M ; Mitra, U ; Sharif University of Technology
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc  2016
    Abstract
    In this paper, a simple memory limited transmitter for molecular communication is proposed, in which information is encoded in the emission rate of the molecules. Taking advantage of memory, the proposed transmitter reduces the ISI problem by properly adjusting its emission rate, which can be interpreted as water-filling on the expected interference. The error probability of the proposed scheme is derived and the result is compared with the error probability of the optimal transmitter obtained by dynamic programming methods. Furthermore, for the special case of channel with one symbol memory, a tight lower bound on error probability is derived. Numerical results show that the performance of... 

    Innovative Team Climate, Teamwork Quality and Team Performance in Software Development Teams

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Kazemi, Mehdi (Author) ; Kermanshah, Ali (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    In this dissertation, our aim is to evaluate a model linking “Teamwork Quality” and “Innovative Team Climate”. Teamwork Quality is defined as the quality of interactions among team members that includes six dimensions: “Communication”, “Coordination”, “Balance of Contribution”, “Mutual Support”, “Effort”, and “Cohesion”. Innovative Team Climate refers to shared perceptions of team policies, practices and procedures in support of innovation. This construct is composed of four dimensions: “Vision”, “Participation Safety”, “Task Orientation”, and “Support of Innovation”. Firstly, we hypothesized that there are positive relations between Innovative Team Climate and Teamwork Quality itself and... 

    Comparison Between Methods Of Synchronization In A Queue With Finite Customer Population

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Kazemi, Hesam (Author) ; Mahlooji, Hashem (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    One technique to reduce variance of output in comparing two or more systems via simulation is random number synchronization. the primary technique for achieving synchronization is to assign an independent seed to each random process and then use the same collection of seeds across all systems . Another way of synchronization in systems with limited customer population is to assign different seed to each customer (transaction) and then use the same collection of seeds across all systems. The main Question to be considered here is which of these methods of synchronization can better reduce variance of output in a queue with finite customer population