6,085 research outputs found
Status Updates Over Unreliable Multiaccess Channels
Applications like environmental sensing, and health and activity sensing, are
supported by networks of devices (nodes) that send periodic packet
transmissions over the wireless channel to a sink node. We look at simple
abstractions that capture the following commonalities of such networks (a) the
nodes send periodically sensed information that is temporal and must be
delivered in a timely manner, (b) they share a multiple access channel and (c)
channels between the nodes and the sink are unreliable (packets may be received
in error) and differ in quality.
We consider scheduled access and slotted ALOHA-like random access. Under
scheduled access, nodes take turns and get feedback on whether a transmitted
packet was received successfully by the sink. During its turn, a node may
transmit more than once to counter channel uncertainty. For slotted ALOHA-like
access, each node attempts transmission in every slot with a certain
probability. For these access mechanisms we derive the age of information
(AoI), which is a timeliness metric, and arrive at conditions that optimize AoI
at the sink. We also analyze the case of symmetric updating, in which updates
from different nodes must have the same AoI. We show that ALOHA-like access,
while simple, leads to AoI that is worse by a factor of about 2e, in comparison
to scheduled access
Status Updates Through Multicast Networks
Using age of information as the freshness metric, we examine a multicast
network in which real-time status updates are generated by the source and sent
to a group of interested receivers. We show that in order to keep the
information freshness at each receiver, the source should terminate the
transmission of the current update and start sending a new update packet as
soon as it receives the acknowledgements back from any out of nodes. As
the source stopping threshold increases, a node is more likely to get the
latest generated update, but the age of the most recent update is more likely
to become outdated. We derive the age minimized stopping threshold that
balances the likelihood of getting the latest update and the freshness of the
latest update for shifted exponential link delay. Through numerical evaluations
for different stopping strategies, we find that waiting for the
acknowledgements from the earliest out of nodes leads to lower average
age than waiting for a pre-selected group of nodes. We also observe that a
properly chosen threshold can prevent information staleness for increasing
number of nodes in the multicast network.Comment: 55th Allerton Conference on Communication, Control and Computing,
201
Multicast With Prioritized Delivery: How Fresh is Your Data?
We consider a multicast network in which real-time status updates generated
by a source are replicated and sent to multiple interested receiving nodes
through independent links. The receiving nodes are divided into two groups: one
priority group consists of nodes that require the reception of every update
packet, the other non-priority group consists of all other nodes without the
delivery requirement. Using age of information as a freshness metric, we
analyze the time-averaged age at both priority and non-priority nodes. For
shifted-exponential link delay distributions, the average age at a priority
node is lower than that at a non-priority node due to the delivery guarantee.
However, this advantage for priority nodes disappears if the link delay is
exponential distributed. Both groups of nodes have the same time-averaged age,
which implies that the guaranteed delivery of updates has no effect the
time-averaged freshness.Comment: IEEE SPAWC 201
Uplink Linear Receivers for Multi-cell Multiuser MIMO with Pilot Contamination: Large System Analysis
Base stations with a large number of transmit antennas have the potential to
serve a large number of users at high rates. However, the receiver processing
in the uplink relies on channel estimates which are known to suffer from pilot
interference. In this work, making use of the similarity of the uplink received
signal in CDMA with that of a multi-cell multi-antenna system, we perform a
large system analysis when the receiver employs an MMSE filter with a pilot
contaminated estimate. We assume a Rayleigh fading channel with different
received powers from users. We find the asymptotic Signal to Interference plus
Noise Ratio (SINR) as the number of antennas and number of users per base
station grow large while maintaining a fixed ratio. Through the SINR expression
we explore the scenario where the number of users being served are comparable
to the number of antennas at the base station. The SINR explicitly captures the
effect of pilot contamination and is found to be the same as that employing a
matched filter with a pilot contaminated estimate. We also find the exact
expression for the interference suppression obtained using an MMSE filter which
is an important factor when there are significant number of users in the system
as compared to the number of antennas. In a typical set up, in terms of the
five percentile SINR, the MMSE filter is shown to provide significant gains
over matched filtering and is within 5 dB of MMSE filter with perfect channel
estimate. Simulation results for achievable rates are close to large system
limits for even a 10-antenna base station with 3 or more users per cell.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communication
Bits Through Bufferless Queues
This paper investigates the capacity of a channel in which information is
conveyed by the timing of consecutive packets passing through a queue with
independent and identically distributed service times. Such timing channels are
commonly studied under the assumption of a work-conserving queue. In contrast,
this paper studies the case of a bufferless queue that drops arriving packets
while a packet is in service. Under this bufferless model, the paper provides
upper bounds on the capacity of timing channels and establishes achievable
rates for the case of bufferless M/M/1 and M/G/1 queues. In particular, it is
shown that a bufferless M/M/1 queue at worst suffers less than 10% reduction in
capacity when compared to an M/M/1 work-conserving queue.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted in 51st Annual Allerton Conference on
Communication, Control, and Computing, University of Illinois, Monticello,
Illinois, Oct 2-4, 201
- …