47 research outputs found
An Erlang multirate loss model supporting elastic traffic under the threshold policy
In this paper, we propose a multirate teletraffic loss model of a single link with certain bandwidth capacity that accommodates Poisson arriving calls, which can tolerate bandwidth compression (elastic traffic), under the threshold policy. When compression occurs, the service time of new and in-service calls increases. The threshold policy provides different QoS among service-classes by limiting the number of calls of a service-class up to a pre-defined threshold, which can be different for each service-class. Due to the bandwidth compression mechanism, the steady state probabilities in the proposed model do not have a product form solution. However, we approximate the model by a reversible Markov chain, and prove recursive formulas for the calculation of call blocking probabilities and link utilization. The accuracy of the proposed formulas is verified through simulation and found to be very satisfactory
A Cooperation-Driven ICN-based Caching Scheme for Mobile Content chunk Delivery at RAN
In order to resolve the tension between continuously growing mobile usersâ demands on content access and the scarcity of the bandwidth capacity over backhaul links, we propose in this paper a fully distributed ICN-based caching scheme for content objects in Radio Access Network (RAN) at eNodeBs. Such caching scheme operates in a cooperative way within neighbourhoods, aiming to reduce cache redundancy so as to improve the diversity of content distribution. The caching decision logic at individual eNodeBs allows for adaptive caching, by taking into account dynamic context information, such as content popularity and availability. The efficiency of the proposed distributed caching scheme is evaluated via extensive simulations, which show great performance gains, in terms of a substantial reduction of backhaul content traffic as well as great improvement on the diversity of content distribution, etc
Wireless Body Area Networks for Health-Care Systems
Body Area Network (BAN) development has been driven by pressure to reduce health care costs and by an increased focus on prevention and early risk BANs are highly localized wireless networks that can potentially support a variety of medical applications. Our final paper deals with all aspects involved in Wireless BAN (WBAN) in health care arena