199,549 research outputs found

    When Mobile Blockchain Meets Edge Computing

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    Blockchain, as the backbone technology of the current popular Bitcoin digital currency, has become a promising decentralized data management framework. Although blockchain has been widely adopted in many applications, e.g., finance, healthcare, and logistics, its application in mobile services is still limited. This is due to the fact that blockchain users need to solve preset proof-of-work puzzles to add new data, i.e., a block, to the blockchain. Solving the proof-of-work, however, consumes substantial resources in terms of CPU time and energy, which is not suitable for resource-limited mobile devices. To facilitate blockchain applications in future mobile Internet of Things systems, multiple access mobile edge computing appears to be an auspicious solution to solve the proof-of-work puzzles for mobile users. We first introduce a novel concept of edge computing for mobile blockchain. Then, we introduce an economic approach for edge computing resource management. Moreover, a prototype of mobile edge computing enabled blockchain systems is presented with experimental results to justify the proposed concept.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Communications Magazin

    Mobile Cloud Computing Model and Big Data Analysis for Healthcare Applications

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    Mobile devices are increasingly becoming an indispensable part of people\u27s daily life, facilitating to perform a variety of useful tasks. Mobile cloud computing integrates mobile and cloud computing to expand their capabilities and benefits and overcomes their limitations, such as limited memory, CPU power, and battery life. Big data analytics technologies enable extracting value from data having four Vs: volume, variety, velocity, and veracity. This paper discusses networked healthcare and the role of mobile cloud computing and big data analytics in its enablement. The motivation and development of networked healthcare applications and systems is presented along with the adoption of cloud computing in healthcare. A cloudlet-based mobile cloud-computing infrastructure to be used for healthcare big data applications is described. The techniques, tools, and applications of big data analytics are reviewed. Conclusions are drawn concerning the design of networked healthcare systems using big data and mobile cloud-computing technologies. An outlook on networked healthcare is given

    Hybrid mobile computing for connected autonomous vehicles

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    With increasing urbanization and the number of cars on road, there are many global issues on modern transport systems, Autonomous driving and connected vehicles are the most promising technologies to tackle these issues. The so-called integrated technology connected autonomous vehicles (CAV) can provide a wide range of safety applications for safer, greener and more efficient intelligent transport systems (ITS). As computing is an extreme component for CAV systems,various mobile computing models including mobile local computing, mobile edge computing and mobile cloud computing are proposed. However it is believed that none of these models fits all CAV applications, which have highly diverse quality of service (QoS) requirements such as communication delay, data rate, accuracy, reliability and/or computing latency.In this thesis, we are motivated to propose a hybrid mobile computing model with objective of overcoming limitations of individual models and maximizing the performances for CAV applications.In proposed hybrid mobile computing model three basic computing models and/or their combinations are chosen and applied to different CAV applications, which include mobile local computing, mobile edge computing and mobile cloud computing. Different computing models and their combinations are selected according to the QoS requirements of the CAV applications.Following the idea, we first investigate the job offloading and allocation of computing and communication resources at the local hosts and external computing centers with QoS aware and resource awareness. Distributed admission control and resource allocation algorithms are proposed including two baseline non-cooperative algorithms and a matching theory based cooperative algorithm. Experiment results demonstrate the feasibility of the hybrid mobile computing model and show large improvement on the service quality and capacity over existing individual computing models. The matching algorithm also largely outperforms the baseline non-cooperative algorithms.In addition, two specific use cases of the hybrid mobile computing for CAV applications are investigated: object detection with mobile local computing where only local computing resources are used, and movie recommendation with mobile cloud computing where remote cloud resources are used. For object detection, we focus on the challenges of detecting vehicles, pedestrians and cyclists in driving environment and propose three methods to an existing CNN based object detector. Large detection performance improvement is obtained over the KITTI benchmark test dataset. For movie recommendation we propose two recommendation models based on a general framework of integrating machine learning and collaborative filtering approach.The experiment results on Netix movie dataset show that our models are very effective for cold start items recommendatio
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