9,414 research outputs found
Reliable Transmission of Short Packets through Queues and Noisy Channels under Latency and Peak-Age Violation Guarantees
This work investigates the probability that the delay and the peak-age of
information exceed a desired threshold in a point-to-point communication system
with short information packets. The packets are generated according to a
stationary memoryless Bernoulli process, placed in a single-server queue and
then transmitted over a wireless channel. A variable-length stop-feedback
coding scheme---a general strategy that encompasses simple automatic repetition
request (ARQ) and more sophisticated hybrid ARQ techniques as special
cases---is used by the transmitter to convey the information packets to the
receiver. By leveraging finite-blocklength results, the delay violation and the
peak-age violation probabilities are characterized without resorting to
approximations based on large-deviation theory as in previous literature.
Numerical results illuminate the dependence of delay and peak-age violation
probability on system parameters such as the frame size and the undetected
error probability, and on the chosen packet-management policy. The guidelines
provided by our analysis are particularly useful for the design of low-latency
ultra-reliable communication systems.Comment: To appear in IEEE journal on selected areas of communication (IEEE
JSAC
Virtual RTCP: A Case Study of Monitoring and Repair for UDP-based IPTV Systems
IPTV systems have seen widespread deployment, but often lack robust mechanisms for monitoring the quality of experience. This makes it difficult for network operators to ensure that their services match the quality of traditional broadcast TV systems, leading to consumer dissatisfaction. We present a case study of virtual RTCP, a new framework for reception quality monitoring and reporting for UDP-encapsulated MPEG video delivered over IP multicast. We show that this allows incremental deployment of reporting infrastructure, coupled with effective retransmission-based packet loss repair
Energy-efficient wireless communication
In this chapter we present an energy-efficient highly adaptive network interface architecture and a novel data link layer protocol for wireless networks that provides Quality of Service (QoS) support for diverse traffic types. Due to the dynamic nature of wireless networks, adaptations in bandwidth scheduling and error control are necessary to achieve energy efficiency and an acceptable quality of service. In our approach we apply adaptability through all layers of the protocol stack, and provide feedback to the applications. In this way the applications can adapt the data streams, and the network protocols can adapt the communication parameters
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Survey of traffic control schemes and error control schemes for ATM networks
Among the techniques proposed for B-ISDN transfer mode, ATM concept is considered to be the most promising transfer technique because of its flexibility and efficiency. This paper surveys and reviews a number of topics related to ATM networks. Those topics cover congestion control, provision of multiple classes of traffic, and error control. Due to the nature of ATM networks, those issues are far more challenging than in conventional networks. Sorne of the more promising solutions to those issues are surveyed, and the corresponding results on performance are summarized. Future research problems in ATM protocol aspect are also presented
Downlink Video Streaming for Users Non-Equidistant from Base Station
We consider multiuser video transmission for users that are non-equidistantly positioned from base station. We propose a greedy algorithm for video streaming in a wireless system with capacity achieving channel coding, that implements the cross-layer principle by partially separating the physical and the application layer. In such a system the parameters at the physical layer are dependent on the packet length and the conditions in the wireless channel and the parameters at the application layer are dependent on the reduction of the expected distortion assuming no packet errors in the system. We also address the fairness in the multiuser video system with non-equidistantly positioned users. Our fairness algorithm is based on modified opportunistic round robin scheduling. We evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithms by simulating the transmission of H.264/AVC video signals in a TDMA wireless system
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