2,208 research outputs found
A Feature-Based Bayesian Method for Content Popularity Prediction in Edge-Caching Networks
Edge-caching is recognized as an efficient technique for future wireless
cellular networks to improve network capacity and user-perceived quality of
experience. Due to the random content requests and the limited cache memory,
designing an efficient caching policy is a challenge. To enhance the
performance of caching systems, an accurate content request prediction
algorithm is essential. Here, we introduce a flexible model, a Poisson
regressor based on a Gaussian process, for the content request distribution in
stationary environments. Our proposed model can incorporate the content
features as side information for prediction enhancement. In order to learn the
model parameters, which yield the Poisson rates or alternatively content
popularities, we invoke the Bayesian approach which is very robust against
over-fitting.
However, the posterior distribution in the Bayes formula is analytically
intractable to compute. To tackle this issue, we apply a Monte Carlo Markov
Chain (MCMC) method to approximate the posterior distribution. Two types of
predictive distributions are formulated for the requests of existing contents
and for the requests of a newly-added content. Finally, simulation results are
provided to confirm the accuracy of the developed content popularity learning
approach.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1903.0306
Living on the Edge: The Role of Proactive Caching in 5G Wireless Networks
This article explores one of the key enablers of beyond G wireless
networks leveraging small cell network deployments, namely proactive caching.
Endowed with predictive capabilities and harnessing recent developments in
storage, context-awareness and social networks, peak traffic demands can be
substantially reduced by proactively serving predictable user demands, via
caching at base stations and users' devices. In order to show the effectiveness
of proactive caching, we examine two case studies which exploit the spatial and
social structure of the network, where proactive caching plays a crucial role.
Firstly, in order to alleviate backhaul congestion, we propose a mechanism
whereby files are proactively cached during off-peak demands based on file
popularity and correlations among users and files patterns. Secondly,
leveraging social networks and device-to-device (D2D) communications, we
propose a procedure that exploits the social structure of the network by
predicting the set of influential users to (proactively) cache strategic
contents and disseminate them to their social ties via D2D communications.
Exploiting this proactive caching paradigm, numerical results show that
important gains can be obtained for each case study, with backhaul savings and
a higher ratio of satisfied users of up to and , respectively.
Higher gains can be further obtained by increasing the storage capability at
the network edge.Comment: accepted for publication in IEEE Communications Magazin
A Bayesian Poisson-Gaussian Process Model for Popularity Learning in Edge-Caching Networks
Edge-caching is recognized as an efficient technique for future cellular
networks to improve network capacity and user-perceived quality of experience.
To enhance the performance of caching systems, designing an accurate content
request prediction algorithm plays an important role. In this paper, we develop
a flexible model, a Poisson regressor based on a Gaussian process, for the
content request distribution.
The first important advantage of the proposed model is that it encourages the
already existing or seen contents with similar features to be correlated in the
feature space and therefore it acts as a regularizer for the estimation.
Second, it allows to predict the popularities of newly-added or unseen contents
whose statistical data is not available in advance. In order to learn the model
parameters, which yield the Poisson arrival rates or alternatively the content
\textit{popularities}, we invoke the Bayesian approach which is robust against
over-fitting.
However, the resulting posterior distribution is analytically intractable to
compute. To tackle this, we apply a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method to
approximate this distribution which is also asymptotically exact. Nevertheless,
the MCMC is computationally demanding especially when the number of contents is
large. Thus, we employ the Variational Bayes (VB) method as an alternative low
complexity solution. More specifically, the VB method addresses the
approximation of the posterior distribution through an optimization problem.
Subsequently, we present a fast block-coordinate descent algorithm to solve
this optimization problem. Finally, extensive simulation results both on
synthetic and real-world datasets are provided to show the accuracy of our
prediction algorithm and the cache hit ratio (CHR) gain compared to existing
methods from the literature
MADServer: An Architecture for Opportunistic Mobile Advanced Delivery
Rapid increases in cellular data traffic demand creative alternative delivery vectors for data. Despite the conceptual attractiveness of mobile data offloading, no concrete web server architectures integrate intelligent offloading in a production-ready and easily deployable manner without relying on vast infrastructural changes to carriers’ networks. Delay-tolerant networking technology offers the means to do just this. We introduce MADServer, a novel DTN-based architecture for mobile data offloading that splits web con- tent among multiple independent delivery vectors based on user and data context. It enables intelligent data offload- ing, caching, and querying solutions which can be incorporated in a manner that still satisfies user expectations for timely delivery. At the same time, it allows for users who have poor or expensive connections to the cellular network to leverage multi-hop opportunistic routing to send and receive data. We also present a preliminary implementation of MADServer and provide real-world performance evaluations
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