3,564 research outputs found
Optimizing Adaptive Transmission Policies for Wireless Vehicular Communications
Abstract—The adoption of wireless vehicular communication technologies would strongly depend on the technologies transmission reliability, required by QoS demanding traffic safety applications, and the system’s scalability as the technology is gradually introduced. To this aim, this work proposes the use of opportunistic transmission policies that dynamically adapt the transmission parameters based on the operating conditions and potential traffic safety risks. The work analyses different configuration proposals with the aim to meeting the strong traffic safety QoS requirements, while maximizing the technology’s robustness and minimising channel congestion, which in turn is crucial to guarantee the future system’s scalability
Markov Decision Processes with Applications in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) consist of autonomous and resource-limited
devices. The devices cooperate to monitor one or more physical phenomena within
an area of interest. WSNs operate as stochastic systems because of randomness
in the monitored environments. For long service time and low maintenance cost,
WSNs require adaptive and robust methods to address data exchange, topology
formulation, resource and power optimization, sensing coverage and object
detection, and security challenges. In these problems, sensor nodes are to make
optimized decisions from a set of accessible strategies to achieve design
goals. This survey reviews numerous applications of the Markov decision process
(MDP) framework, a powerful decision-making tool to develop adaptive algorithms
and protocols for WSNs. Furthermore, various solution methods are discussed and
compared to serve as a guide for using MDPs in WSNs
A survey of machine learning techniques applied to self organizing cellular networks
In this paper, a survey of the literature of the past fifteen years involving Machine Learning (ML) algorithms applied to self organizing cellular networks is performed. In order for future networks to overcome the current limitations and address the issues of current cellular systems, it is clear that more intelligence needs to be deployed, so that a fully autonomous and flexible network can be enabled. This paper focuses on the learning perspective of Self Organizing Networks (SON) solutions and provides, not only an overview of the most common ML techniques encountered in cellular networks, but also manages to classify each paper in terms of its learning solution, while also giving some examples. The authors also classify each paper in terms of its self-organizing use-case and discuss how each proposed solution performed. In addition, a comparison between the most commonly found ML algorithms in terms of certain SON metrics is performed and general guidelines on when to choose each ML algorithm for each SON function are proposed. Lastly, this work also provides future research directions and new paradigms that the use of more robust and intelligent algorithms, together with data gathered by operators, can bring to the cellular networks domain and fully enable the concept of SON in the near future
Live Prefetching for Mobile Computation Offloading
The conventional designs of mobile computation offloading fetch user-specific
data to the cloud prior to computing, called offline prefetching. However, this
approach can potentially result in excessive fetching of large volumes of data
and cause heavy loads on radio-access networks. To solve this problem, the
novel technique of live prefetching is proposed in this paper that seamlessly
integrates the task-level computation prediction and prefetching within the
cloud-computing process of a large program with numerous tasks. The technique
avoids excessive fetching but retains the feature of leveraging prediction to
reduce the program runtime and mobile transmission energy. By modeling the
tasks in an offloaded program as a stochastic sequence, stochastic optimization
is applied to design fetching policies to minimize mobile energy consumption
under a deadline constraint. The policies enable real-time control of the
prefetched-data sizes of candidates for future tasks. For slow fading, the
optimal policy is derived and shown to have a threshold-based structure,
selecting candidate tasks for prefetching and controlling their prefetched data
based on their likelihoods. The result is extended to design close-to-optimal
prefetching policies to fast fading channels. Compared with fetching without
prediction, live prefetching is shown theoretically to always achieve reduction
on mobile energy consumption.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. on Wireless Communicatio
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