16,268 research outputs found
Quality-constrained routing in publish/subscribe systems
Routing in publish/subscribe (pub/sub) features a communication model where messages are not given explicit destination addresses, but destinations are determined by matching the subscription declared by subscribers. For a dynamic computing environment with applications that have quality demands, this is not sufficient. Routing decision should, in such environments, not only depend on the subscription predicate, but should also take the quality-constraints of applications and characteristics of network paths into account. We identified three abstraction levels of these quality constraints: functional, middleware and network. The main contribution of the paper is the concept of the integration of these constraints into the pub/sub routing. This is done by extending the syntax of pub/sub system and applying four generic, proposed by us, guidelines. The added values of quality-constrained routing concept are: message delivery satisfying quality demands of applications, improvement of system scalability and more optimise use of the network resources. We discuss the use case that shows the practical value of our concept
A Novel Multiobjective Cell Switch-Off Framework for Cellular Networks
Cell Switch-Off (CSO) is recognized as a promising approach to reduce the
energy consumption in next-generation cellular networks. However, CSO poses
serious challenges not only from the resource allocation perspective but also
from the implementation point of view. Indeed, CSO represents a difficult
optimization problem due to its NP-complete nature. Moreover, there are a
number of important practical limitations in the implementation of CSO schemes,
such as the need for minimizing the real-time complexity and the number of
on-off/off-on transitions and CSO-induced handovers. This article introduces a
novel approach to CSO based on multiobjective optimization that makes use of
the statistical description of the service demand (known by operators). In
addition, downlink and uplink coverage criteria are included and a comparative
analysis between different models to characterize intercell interference is
also presented to shed light on their impact on CSO. The framework
distinguishes itself from other proposals in two ways: 1) The number of
on-off/off-on transitions as well as handovers are minimized, and 2) the
computationally-heavy part of the algorithm is executed offline, which makes
its implementation feasible. The results show that the proposed scheme achieves
substantial energy savings in small cell deployments where service demand is
not uniformly distributed, without compromising the Quality-of-Service (QoS) or
requiring heavy real-time processing
Perceived quality of multimedia educational content: A cognitive style approach
This is the post-print version of the Article. The oficial published version can be accessed from the link below - Copyright, 2006 SpringerCognitive styles influence the way how humans process information, with previous research demonstrating that they have significant effects on student learning in multimedia environments. On the other hand, the perceptual quality of the human multimedia experience is notoriously difficult to measure. In this paper, we report the results of an empirical study, which investigated the relationship between user cognitive styles and perceptual multimedia quality, in which users had the possibility to specify their desired Quality of Service settings — in terms of frame rates and color depth. Results show that whilst color choice is impacted by a participant's cognitive style, such Quality of Service parameters do not significantly affect perceived multimedia quality, and that users do not necessarily choose optimum presentation settings to enhance their perceived enjoyment and assimilation of multimedia informational content
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