47 research outputs found
Thirty Years of Machine Learning: The Road to Pareto-Optimal Wireless Networks
Future wireless networks have a substantial potential in terms of supporting
a broad range of complex compelling applications both in military and civilian
fields, where the users are able to enjoy high-rate, low-latency, low-cost and
reliable information services. Achieving this ambitious goal requires new radio
techniques for adaptive learning and intelligent decision making because of the
complex heterogeneous nature of the network structures and wireless services.
Machine learning (ML) algorithms have great success in supporting big data
analytics, efficient parameter estimation and interactive decision making.
Hence, in this article, we review the thirty-year history of ML by elaborating
on supervised learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning and deep
learning. Furthermore, we investigate their employment in the compelling
applications of wireless networks, including heterogeneous networks (HetNets),
cognitive radios (CR), Internet of things (IoT), machine to machine networks
(M2M), and so on. This article aims for assisting the readers in clarifying the
motivation and methodology of the various ML algorithms, so as to invoke them
for hitherto unexplored services as well as scenarios of future wireless
networks.Comment: 46 pages, 22 fig
MDP-based MAC design with deterministic backoffs in virtualized 802.11 WLANs
This paper presents MAC protocols for a virtualized 802.11 network aiming to improve network performance and isolation among service providers (SPs). Taking into account the statistical properties of arrival traffic, a Markov Decision Process (MDP) is formulated to maximize the network throughput subject to SP reservations. By introducing the policy tree of the MDP, we
present an optimal access policy. Each user can track this policy tree by carrier sensing and learn its transmission opportunity. As computational complexity of the policy tree grows exponentially with the total number of users, an efficient heuristic algorithm is proposed based on the MDP formulation where each user is
assigned a deterministic backoff value. Numerical results show that performance of the proposed heuristic algorithm closely
matches to the optimal policy. Moreover, both optimal and heuristic algorithms significantly improve TDMA and CSMA in terms of packet delivery ratio and isolation in unsaturated networks
Five Facets of 6G: Research Challenges and Opportunities
Whilst the fifth-generation (5G) systems are being rolled out across the
globe, researchers have turned their attention to the exploration of radical
next-generation solutions. At this early evolutionary stage we survey five main
research facets of this field, namely {\em Facet~1: next-generation
architectures, spectrum and services, Facet~2: next-generation networking,
Facet~3: Internet of Things (IoT), Facet~4: wireless positioning and sensing,
as well as Facet~5: applications of deep learning in 6G networks.} In this
paper, we have provided a critical appraisal of the literature of promising
techniques ranging from the associated architectures, networking, applications
as well as designs. We have portrayed a plethora of heterogeneous architectures
relying on cooperative hybrid networks supported by diverse access and
transmission mechanisms. The vulnerabilities of these techniques are also
addressed and carefully considered for highlighting the most of promising
future research directions. Additionally, we have listed a rich suite of
learning-driven optimization techniques. We conclude by observing the
evolutionary paradigm-shift that has taken place from pure single-component
bandwidth-efficiency, power-efficiency or delay-optimization towards
multi-component designs, as exemplified by the twin-component ultra-reliable
low-latency mode of the 5G system. We advocate a further evolutionary step
towards multi-component Pareto optimization, which requires the exploration of
the entire Pareto front of all optiomal solutions, where none of the components
of the objective function may be improved without degrading at least one of the
other components
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Neural network design for intelligent mobile network optimisation
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University LondonThe mobile networks users’ demands for data services are increasing exponentially, this is due to two main factors: the first is the evolution of smart phones and their application, and the second is the emerging new technologies for internet of things, smart cities…etc, which keeps pumping more data into the network; ‘though most of the data routed in the current mobile network is non-live data’. This increasing of demands arise the necessity for the mobile network operators to keep improving their network to satisfy it, this improvement takes place via adding hardware or increasing the resources or a combination of both. The radio resources are strictly limited due to spectrum licensing and availability, therefore efficient spectrum utilization is a major goal to be achieved for both network operators and developers. Simultaneous and multiple channel access,and adding more cells to the network are ways used to increase the data exchanged between the network nodes. The current 4G mobile system is based on the Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) for accessing the medium and the intercell interference degrades the link quality at the cell edge, with the introduction of heterogeneity concept to the LTE in Release 10 of the 3GPP the handover process became even more complex. To mitigate the intercell interference at the cell edge, coordinated multipoint and carrier aggregation techniques are utilized for dual connectivity. This work is focused on designing and proposing enhancing features to improve network performance and sustainability, these features comprises of distributing small cells for data only transmission, handover schemes performance evaluation at cell edge with dual connectivity, and Artificial Intelligence technology for balancing and prediction. In the proposed model design the data and controls of the Small eNodeB (SeNodeB) are processed at the network edge using a Mobile Edge Computing (MEC) server and the SeNodeBs are used to boost services provided to the users, also the concept of caching data has been investigated, the caching units where implemented in different network levels. The proposed system and resource management are simulated using the OPNET modeller and evaluated through multiple scenarios with and without full load, the UE is reconfigured to accommodate dual connectivity and have two separate connections for uplink and downlink, while maintaining connection to the Macro cell via uplink, the downlink is dedicated for small cells when content is requested from the cache. The results clearly show that the proposed system can decrease the latency while the total throughput delivered by the network has highly improved when SeNodeBs are deployed in the system, rising throughput will incur the rise of overall capacity which leads to better services being provided to the users or more users to join and benefit from the network. Handover improvement is also considered in this work, with the help of two Artificial Intelligence (AI) entities better handover performance are achieved. Balanced load over the SeNodeBs results in less frequent handover, the proposed load balancer is based on artificial neural network clustering model with self-organizing map as a hidden layer, it’s trained to forecast the network condition and learn to reduce the number of handovers especially for the UEs at the cell edge by performing only necessary ones, and avoid handovers to the Macro cell for the downlink direction. The examined handovers concern the downlinks when routing non live video stored at the small cell’s cache, and a reduction in the frequent handovers was achieved when running the balancer. Keep revolving in the handover orbit, another way to preserve and utilize network resources is by predicting the handovers before they occur, and allocate the required data in the target SeNodeB, the predictor entity in the proposed system architecture combines the features of Radial Basis Function Neural Network and neural network time series tool to create and update prediction list from the system’s collected data and learn to predict the next SeNodeB to associate with. The prediction entity is simulated using MATLAB, and the results shows that the system was able to deliver up to 92% correct predictions for handovers which led to overall throughput improvement of 75%
Real-Time Sensor Networks and Systems for the Industrial IoT
The Industrial Internet of Things (Industrial IoT—IIoT) has emerged as the core construct behind the various cyber-physical systems constituting a principal dimension of the fourth Industrial Revolution. While initially born as the concept behind specific industrial applications of generic IoT technologies, for the optimization of operational efficiency in automation and control, it quickly enabled the achievement of the total convergence of Operational (OT) and Information Technologies (IT). The IIoT has now surpassed the traditional borders of automation and control functions in the process and manufacturing industry, shifting towards a wider domain of functions and industries, embraced under the dominant global initiatives and architectural frameworks of Industry 4.0 (or Industrie 4.0) in Germany, Industrial Internet in the US, Society 5.0 in Japan, and Made-in-China 2025 in China. As real-time embedded systems are quickly achieving ubiquity in everyday life and in industrial environments, and many processes already depend on real-time cyber-physical systems and embedded sensors, the integration of IoT with cognitive computing and real-time data exchange is essential for real-time analytics and realization of digital twins in smart environments and services under the various frameworks’ provisions. In this context, real-time sensor networks and systems for the Industrial IoT encompass multiple technologies and raise significant design, optimization, integration and exploitation challenges. The ten articles in this Special Issue describe advances in real-time sensor networks and systems that are significant enablers of the Industrial IoT paradigm. In the relevant landscape, the domain of wireless networking technologies is centrally positioned, as expected