4 research outputs found
Asymmetric-valued Spectrum Auction and Competition in Wireless Broadband Services
We study bidding and pricing competition between two spiteful mobile network
operators (MNOs) with considering their existing spectrum holdings. Given
asymmetric-valued spectrum blocks are auctioned off to them via a first-price
sealed-bid auction, we investigate the interactions between two spiteful MNOs
and users as a three-stage dynamic game and characterize the dynamic game's
equilibria. We show an asymmetric pricing structure and different market share
between two spiteful MNOs. Perhaps counter-intuitively, our results show that
the MNO who acquires the less-valued spectrum block always lowers his service
price despite providing double-speed LTE service to users. We also show that
the MNO who acquires the high-valued spectrum block, despite charing a higher
price, still achieves more market share than the other MNO. We further show
that the competition between two MNOs leads to some loss of their revenues. By
investigating a cross-over point at which the MNOs' profits are switched, it
serves as the benchmark of practical auction designs
Resource Allocation with Reverse Pricing for Communication Networks
Reverse pricing has been recognized as an effective tool to handle demand
uncertainty in the travel industry (e.g., airlines and hotels). To investigate
its viability for communication networks, we study the practical limitations of
(operator-driven) time-dependent pricing that has been recently introduced,
taking into account demand uncertainty. Compared to (operator-driven)
time-dependent pricing, we show that the proposed pricing scheme can achieve
"triple-win" solutions: an increase in the total average revenue of the
operator; higher average resource utilization efficiency; and an increment in
the total average payoff of the users. Our findings provide a new outlook on
resource allocation, and design guidelines for adopting the reverse pricing
scheme.Comment: to appear in IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC)
2016, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (6 pages, 3 figures