5 research outputs found

    Time-Optimized Task Offloading Decision Making in Mobile Edge Computing

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    Mobile Edge Computing application domains such as vehicular networks, unmanned aerial vehicles, data analytics tasks at the edge and augmented reality have recently emerged. Under such domains, while mobile nodes are moving and have certain tasks to be offloaded to Edge Servers, choosing an appropriate time and an ideally suited server to guarantee the quality of service can be challenging. We tackle the offloading decision making problem by adopting the principles of Optimal Stopping Theory to minimize the execution delay in a sequential decision manner. A performance evaluation is provided by using real data sets compared with the optimal solution. The results show that our approach significantly minimizes the execution delay for task execution and the results are very close to the optimal solution

    On the Optimality of Task Offloading in Mobile Edge Computing Environments

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    Mobile Edge Computing (MEC) has emerged as new computing paradigm to improve the QoS of users' applications. A challenge in MEC is computation (task/data) offloading, whose goal is to enhance the mobile devices' capabilities to face the requirements of new applications. Computation offloading faces the challenges of where and when to offload data to perform computing (analytics) tasks. In this paper, we tackle this problem by adopting the principles of Optimal Stopping Theory contributing with two time-optimized sequential decision making models. A performance evaluation is provided using real world data sets compared with baseline deterministic and stochastic models. The results show that our approach optimizes such decision in single user and competitive users scenarios

    Delay-tolerant sequential decision making for task offloading in mobile edge computing environments

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    In recent years, there has been a significant increase in the use of mobile devices and their applications. Meanwhile, cloud computing has been considered as the latest generation of computing infrastructure. There has also been a transformation in cloud computing ideas and their implementation so as to meet the demand for the latest applications. mobile edge computing (MEC) is a computing paradigm that provides cloud services near to the users at the edge of the network. Given the movement of mobile nodes between different MEC servers, the main aim would be the connection to the best server and at the right time in terms of the load of the server in order to optimize the quality of service (QoS) of the mobile nodes. We tackle the offloading decision making problem by adopting the principles of optimal stopping theory (OST) to minimize the execution delay in a sequential decision manner. A performance evaluation is provided using real world data sets with baseline deterministic and stochastic offloading models. The results show that our approach significantly minimizes the execution delay for task execution and the results are closer to the optimal solution than other offloading methods

    Edge-centric inferential modeling & analytics

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    This work contributes to a real-time, edge-centric inferential modeling and analytics methodology introducing the fundamental mechanisms for (i) predictive models update and (ii) diverse models selection in distributed computing. Our objective in edge-centric analytics is the time-optimized model caching and selective forwarding at the network edge adopting optimal stopping theory, where communication overhead is significantly reduced as only inferred knowledge and sufficient statistics are delivered instead of raw data obtaining high quality of analytics. Novel model selection algorithms are introduced to fuse the inherent models' diversity over distributed edge nodes to support inferential analytics tasks to end-users/analysts, and applications in real-time. We provide statistical learning modeling and establish the corresponding mathematical analyses of our mechanisms along with comprehensive performance and comparative assessment using real data from different domains and showing its benefits in edge computing
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