3,175 research outputs found
Recent Advances in Cellular D2D Communications
Device-to-device (D2D) communications have attracted a great deal of attention from researchers in recent years. It is a promising technique for offloading local traffic from cellular base stations by allowing local devices, in physical proximity, to communicate directly with each other. Furthermore, through relaying, D2D is also a promising approach to enhancing service coverage at cell edges or in black spots. However, there are many challenges to realizing the full benefits of D2D. For one, minimizing the interference between legacy cellular and D2D users operating in underlay mode is still an active research issue. With the 5th generation (5G) communication systems expected to be the main data carrier for the Internet-of-Things (IoT) paradigm, the potential role of D2D and its scalability to support massive IoT devices and their machine-centric (as opposed to human-centric) communications need to be investigated. New challenges have also arisen from new enabling technologies for D2D communications, such as non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) and blockchain technologies, which call for new solutions to be proposed. This edited book presents a collection of ten chapters, including one review and nine original research works on addressing many of the aforementioned challenges and beyond
Analysis domain model for shared virtual environments
The field of shared virtual environments, which also
encompasses online games and social 3D environments, has a
system landscape consisting of multiple solutions that share great functional overlap. However, there is little system interoperability between the different solutions. A shared virtual environment has an associated problem domain that is highly complex raising difficult challenges to the development process, starting with the architectural design of the underlying system. This paper has two main contributions. The first contribution is a broad domain analysis of shared virtual environments, which enables developers to have a better understanding of the whole rather than the part(s). The second contribution is a reference domain model for discussing and describing solutions - the Analysis Domain Model
Models and Methods for Network Selection and Balancing in Heterogeneous Scenarios
The outbreak of 5G technologies for wireless communications can be considered a response to the need for widespread coverage, in terms of connectivity and bandwidth, to guarantee broadband services, such as streaming or on-demand programs offered by the main television networks or new generation services based on augmented and virtual reality (AR / VR).
The purpose of the study conducted for this thesis aims to solve two of the main problems that will occur with the outbreak of 5G, that is, the search for the best possible connectivity, in order to offer users the resources necessary to take advantage of the new generation services, and multicast as required by the eMBMS.
The aim of the thesis is the search for innovative algorithms that will allow to obtain the best connectivity to offer users the resources necessary to use the 5G services in a heterogeneous scenario. Study UF that allows you to improve the search for the best candidate network and to achieve a balance that allows you to avoid congestion of the chosen networks. To achieve these two important focuses, I conducted a study on the main mathematical methods that made it possible to select the network based on QoS parameters based on the type of traffic made by users. A further goal was to improve the computational computation performance they present.
Furthermore, I carried out a study in order to obtain an innovative algorithm that would allow the management of multicast. The algorithm that has been implemented responds to the needs present in the eMBMS, in realistic scenarios
Energy-Efficient Multicast Transmission for Underlay Device-to-Device Communications: A Social-Aware Perspective
In this paper, by utilizing the social relationships among mobile users, we present a framework of energy-efficient cluster formation and resource allocation for multicast D2D transmission. In particular, we first deal with D2D multicast cluster/group formation strategy from both physical distance and social trust level. Then we aim to maximize the overall energy-efficiency of D2D multicast groups through resource allocation and power control scheme, which considers the quality-of-service (QoS) requirements of both cellular user equipment and D2D groups. A heuristic algorithm is proposed to solve above energy-efficiency problem with less complexity. After that, considering the limited battery capacity of mobile users, we propose an energy and social aware cluster head update algorithm, which incorporates both the energy constraint and social centrality measurement. Numerical results indicate that the proposed social-tie based D2D multicast group formation and update algorithm form a multicast group in an energy efficient way. Moreover, the proposed resource and power allocation scheme achieves better energy efficiency in terms of throughput per energy consumption. These results show that, by exploiting social domain information, underlay D2D multicast transmission has high practical potential in saving the source on wireless links and in the backhaul
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Heterogeneous Cloud Systems Based on Broadband Embedded Computing
Computing systems continue to evolve from homogeneous systems of commodity-based servers within a single data-center towards modern Cloud systems that consist of numerous data-center clusters virtualized at the infrastructure and application layers to provide scalable, cost-effective and elastic services to devices connected over the Internet. There is an emerging trend towards heterogeneous Cloud systems driven from growth in wired as well as wireless devices that incorporate the potential of millions, and soon billions, of embedded devices enabling new forms of computation and service delivery. Service providers such as broadband cable operators continue to contribute towards this expansion with growing Cloud system infrastructures combined with deployments of increasingly powerful embedded devices across broadband networks. Broadband networks enable access to service provider Cloud data-centers and the Internet from numerous devices. These include home computers, smart-phones, tablets, game-consoles, sensor-networks, and set-top box devices. With these trends in mind, I propose the concept of broadband embedded computing as the utilization of a broadband network of embedded devices for collective computation in conjunction with centralized Cloud infrastructures. I claim that this form of distributed computing results in a new class of heterogeneous Cloud systems, service delivery and application enablement. To support these claims, I present a collection of research contributions in adapting distributed software platforms that include MPI and MapReduce to support simultaneous application execution across centralized data-center blade servers and resource-constrained embedded devices. Leveraging these contributions, I develop two complete prototype system implementations to demonstrate an architecture for heterogeneous Cloud systems based on broadband embedded computing. Each system is validated by executing experiments with applications taken from bioinformatics and image processing as well as communication and computational benchmarks. This vision, however, is not without challenges. The questions on how to adapt standard distributed computing paradigms such as MPI and MapReduce for implementation on potentially resource-constrained embedded devices, and how to adapt cluster computing runtime environments to enable heterogeneous process execution across millions of devices remain open-ended. This dissertation presents methods to begin addressing these open-ended questions through the development and testing of both experimental broadband embedded computing systems and in-depth characterization of broadband network behavior. I present experimental results and comparative analysis that offer potential solutions for optimal scalability and performance for constructing broadband embedded computing systems. I also present a number of contributions enabling practical implementation of both heterogeneous Cloud systems and novel application services based on broadband embedded computing
Software Defined Networks based Smart Grid Communication: A Comprehensive Survey
The current power grid is no longer a feasible solution due to
ever-increasing user demand of electricity, old infrastructure, and reliability
issues and thus require transformation to a better grid a.k.a., smart grid
(SG). The key features that distinguish SG from the conventional electrical
power grid are its capability to perform two-way communication, demand side
management, and real time pricing. Despite all these advantages that SG will
bring, there are certain issues which are specific to SG communication system.
For instance, network management of current SG systems is complex, time
consuming, and done manually. Moreover, SG communication (SGC) system is built
on different vendor specific devices and protocols. Therefore, the current SG
systems are not protocol independent, thus leading to interoperability issue.
Software defined network (SDN) has been proposed to monitor and manage the
communication networks globally. This article serves as a comprehensive survey
on SDN-based SGC. In this article, we first discuss taxonomy of advantages of
SDNbased SGC.We then discuss SDN-based SGC architectures, along with case
studies. Our article provides an in-depth discussion on routing schemes for
SDN-based SGC. We also provide detailed survey of security and privacy schemes
applied to SDN-based SGC. We furthermore present challenges, open issues, and
future research directions related to SDN-based SGC.Comment: Accepte
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