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[Keyword] rate adaptation(22hit)

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  • Adversarial Reinforcement Learning-Based Coordinated Robust Spatial Reuse in Broadcast-Overlaid WLANs

    Yuto KIHIRA  Yusuke KODA  Koji YAMAMOTO  Takayuki NISHIO  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2022/08/02
      Vol:
    E106-B No:2
      Page(s):
    203-212

    Broadcast services for wireless local area networks (WLANs) are being standardized in the IEEE 802.11 task group bc. Envisaging the upcoming coexistence of broadcast access points (APs) with densely-deployed legacy APs, this paper addresses a learning-based spatial reuse with only partial receiver-awareness. This partial awareness means that the broadcast APs can leverage few acknowledgment frames (ACKs) from recipient stations (STAs). This is in view of the specific concerns of broadcast communications. In broadcast communications for a very large number of STAs, ACK implosions occur unless some STAs are stopped from responding with ACKs. Given this, the main contribution of this paper is to demonstrate the feasibility to improve the robustness of learning-based spatial reuse to hidden interferers only with the partial receiver-awareness while discarding any re-training of broadcast APs. The core idea is to leverage robust adversarial reinforcement learning (RARL), where before a hidden interferer is installed, a broadcast AP learns a rate adaptation policy in a competition with a proxy interferer that provides jamming signals intelligently. Therein, the recipient STAs experience interference and the partial STAs provide a feedback overestimating the effect of interference, allowing the broadcast AP to select a data rate to avoid frame losses in a broad range of recipient STAs. Simulations demonstrate the suppression of the throughput degradation under a sudden installation of a hidden interferer, indicating the feasibility of acquiring robustness to the hidden interferer.

  • Polar Code Based on Nested Rate Adaptation Sequence for BDS-3 Regional Short Message Communication

    Gang LI  Shuren GUO  Yi ZHOU  Zaixiu YANG  

     
    PAPER-Satellite Communications

      Pubricized:
    2022/04/20
      Vol:
    E105-B No:10
      Page(s):
    1280-1289

    Regional Short Message Communication (RSMC) service of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) has been widely used in various fields. BDS-3 officially started to provide service in 2020, and the performance of RSMC service was greatly improved, which offers an opportunity for large-scale applications of RSMC in consumer electronic products. Due to the complex application scenarios, the low-cost and low-power of RSMC terminals, a better coding scheme is needed to improve performance. In this paper, we propose a new polar encoding scheme with low code rate and variable code length, which adopts Polarization Weight (PW) to generate the reliability sequence of Polar codes and use a Nested Rate Adaptation Sequence (NRAS) to realize rate adaption for the BDS-3 RSMC. The performance of encoding gain and decoding complexity is analyzed by simulation and experiments. The results validate the effective of this scheme. Compared with Turbo codes, the proposed polar codes scheme achieves about 0.5dB gain with about 50% decoding complexity when the information length including CRC is 128 and code rate is 1/2. The proposed polar codes scheme provides a good reference for further applications in BDS.

  • Rate Adaptation for Robust and Low-Latency Video Transmissions Using Multi-AP Wireless LAN

    Kazuma YAMAMOTO  Hiroyuki YOMO  

     
    PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2021/08/20
      Vol:
    E105-B No:2
      Page(s):
    177-185

    In this paper, we propose rate adaptation mechanisms for robust and low-latency video transmissions exploiting multiple access points (Multi-AP) wireless local area networks (WLANs). The Multi-AP video transmissions employ link-level broadcast and packet-level forward error correction (FEC) in order to realize robust and low-latency video transmissions from a WLAN station (STA) to a gateway (GW). The PHY (physical layer) rate and FEC rate play a key role to control trade-off between the achieved reliability and airtime (i.e., occupancy period of the shared channel) for Multi-AP WLANs. In order to finely control this trade-off while improving the transmitted video quality, the proposed rate adaptation controls PHY rate and FEC rate to be employed for Multi-AP transmissions based on the link quality and frame format of conveyed video traffic. With computer simulations, we evaluate and investigate the effectiveness of the proposed rate adaptation in terms of packet delivery rate (PDR), airtime, delay, and peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR). Furthermore, the quality of video is assessed by using the traffic encoded/decoded by the actual video encoder/decoder. All these results show that the proposed rate adaptation controls trade-off between the reliability and airtime well while offering the high-quality and low-latency video transmissions.

  • Adaptive HARQ Transmission of Polar Codes with a Common Information Set

    Hao LIANG  Aijun LIU  Heng WANG  Kui XU  

     
    LETTER-Coding Theory

      Vol:
    E103-A No:2
      Page(s):
    553-555

    This Letter explores the adaptive hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ) using rate-compatible polar codes constructed with a common information set. The rate adaptation problem is formulated using Markov decision process and solved by a dynamic programming framework in a low-complexity way. Simulation verifies the throughput efficiency of the proposed adaptive HARQ.

  • Adaptive RTS/CTS-Exchange and Rate Prediction in IEEE 802.11 WLANs

    Wonbae PARK  Taejoon KIM  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Pubricized:
    2017/11/27
      Vol:
    E101-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1485-1493

    Regarding IEEE 802.11 wireless local area networks (WLANs), many researchers are focusing on signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)-based rate adaptation schemes, because these schemes have the advantage of accurately selecting transmission rates that suit the channel. However, even SNR-based rate adaptation schemes work poorly in a rapidly varying channel environment. If a transmitter cannot receive accurate rate information due to fast channel fading, it encounters continuous channel errors, because the cycle of rate adaptation and rate information feedback breaks. A well-designed request-to-send/clear-to-send (RTS/CTS) frame exchange policy that accurately reflects the network situation is an indispensable element for enhancing the performance of SNR-based rate adaptation schemes. In this paper, a novel rate adaptation scheme called adaptive RTS/CTS-exchange and rate prediction (ARRP) is proposed, which adapts the transmission rate efficiently for variable network situations, including rapidly varying channels. ARRP selects a transmission rate by predicting the SNR of the data frame to transmit when the channel condition becomes worse. Accordingly, ARRP prevents continuous channel errors through a pre-emptive transmission rate adjustment. Moreover, ARRP utilizes an efficient RTS/CTS frame exchange algorithm that considers the number of contending stations and the current transmission rate of data frames, which drastically reduces both frame collisions and RTS/CTS-exchange overhead simultaneously. Simulation results show that ARRP achieves better performance than other rate adaptation schemes.

  • Intelligent Video Surveillance System Based on Event Detection and Rate Adaptation by Using Multiple Sensors

    Kenji KANAI  Keigo OGAWA  Masaru TAKEUCHI  Jiro KATTO  Toshitaka TSUDA  

     
    PAPER

      Pubricized:
    2017/09/19
      Vol:
    E101-B No:3
      Page(s):
    688-697

    To reduce the backbone video traffic generated by video surveillance, we propose an intelligent video surveillance system that offers multi-modal sensor-based event detection and event-driven video rate adaptation. Our proposed system can detect pedestrian existence and movements in the monitoring area by using multi-modal sensors (camera, laser scanner and infrared distance sensor) and control surveillance video quality according to the detected events. We evaluate event detection accuracy and video traffic volume in the experiment scenarios where up to six pedestrians pass through and/or stop at the monitoring area. Evaluation results conclude that our system can significantly reduce video traffic while ensuring high-quality surveillance.

  • Chunk Size Aware Buffer-Based Algorithm to Improve Viewing Experience in Dynamic HTTP Streaming

    Waqas ur RAHMAN  Kwangsue CHUNG  

     
    PAPER-Multimedia Systems for Communications

      Vol:
    E99-B No:3
      Page(s):
    767-775

    In this paper we propose an adaptive bitrate (ABR) algorithm that selects the video rates by observing and controlling the playback buffer. In a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) adaptive streaming session, buffer dynamics largely depend on the chunk sizes. First, we present the algorithm that selects the next video rates based on the current buffer level, while considering the upcoming chunk sizes. We aim to exploit the variation of chunk sizes of a variable bitrate (VBR) encoded video to optimize the tradeoff between the video rate and buffer underflow events while keeping a low frequency of video rate changes. To evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithm, we consider three scenarios: (i) the video flow does not compete with any cross traffic, (ii) the video flow shares the bottleneck link with competing TCP traffic, and (iii) two HTTP clients share the bottleneck. We show that the proposed algorithm selects a high playback video rate and avoids unnecessary rebuffering while keeping a low frequency of video rate changes. Furthermore, we show that the proposed algorithm changes the video quality gradually to guarantee the user's viewing experience.

  • Smart Packet Transmission Scheduling Combined with Rate Adaptation for Enhancing Total Throughput against Channel Fading in Wireless LAN

    Shiori YOSHIOKA  Yosuke TANIGAWA  Hideki TODE  

     
    PAPER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Vol:
    E98-B No:12
      Page(s):
    2496-2507

    This paper deals with the inefficient channel utilization of wireless LANs that use rate adaptation. Recently, wireless LANs are being utilized in various environments. However, inefficient channel utilization is still a serious problem. The effective solutions include to decrease the frequency of packet loss and to transmit packets at a higher rate. While the backoff algorithm in IEEE 802.11 avoids only the packet loss caused by collision, other previous works tackle the packet loss caused by channel fading by means of transmission at a lower rate. This approach is called rate adaptation and a simple rate adaptation scheme is widely diffused in commercial 802.11 wireless LAN devices. However, utilizing lower transmission rate degrades transmission efficiency because the channel is occupied for a longer time. In this paper, decreasing transmission rate is avoided with novel transmission scheduling. Specifically, the proposed scheduling interrupts packet transmission to receiver stations under fading channel condition until the condition improves. Instead, other packets to other stations are transmitted in advance. To implement this proposed scheduling, only access points (APs) need to be modified. Hence, legacy wireless stations can benefit from higher communication bandwidth simply by introducing the modified APs. Moreover, although wireless stations must also be modified, an extended RTS/CTS handshake is also proposed to quickly detect the improvement of channel condition and to minimize the wasted time even if fading loss occurs. Here, wireless stations must also be modified to adopt the extended RTS/CTS handshake but further bandwidth increase is achievable. Evaluation results demonstrate that network throughput is improved without degrading the throughput fairness among receiver stations and packet transfer delay of interrupted stations.

  • Rate Adaptation Based on Exposure Assessment Using Rectenna Output for WLAN Station Powered with Microwave Power Transmission

    Shota YAMASHITA  Koichi SAKAGUCHI  Yong HUANG  Koji YAMAMOTO  Takayuki NISHIO  Masahiro MORIKURA  Naoki SHINOHARA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E98-B No:9
      Page(s):
    1785-1794

    This paper proposes a rate adaptation scheme (RAS) for a wireless local area network (WLAN) station powered with microwave power transmission (MPT). A WLAN station attempting to transmit data frames when exposed to microwave radiation for MPT, experiences a reduction in the physical (PHY) layer data rate because frames are lost even when the carrier sense mechanism is used. The key idea of the proposed scheme is to utilize the output of the rectenna used for receiving microwave power. Using rectenna output, a WLAN station based on the proposed scheme assesses whether the station is exposed to microwave radiation for MPT. Then, using historical data corresponding to the assessment result, the station selects an appropriate PHY data rate. The historical data are obtained from previous transmission results, e.g., historical data pertaining to the data frame loss ratio. The proposed scheme was implemented and verified through an experiment. Experimental results showed that the proposed scheme prevents the reduction in the PHY data rate, which is caused by the use of historical data stored in a single memory. Thus, the proposed scheme leads to an improvement in the WLAN throughput.

  • Rate Adaptation by Estimating Channel Quality in IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN

    Minho KIM  Youngjip KIM  Chong-Ho CHOI  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Vol:
    E95-B No:1
      Page(s):
    243-253

    The channel characteristics of IEEE 802.11 WLAN vary with time and this can affect packet transmission performance. For achieving robust and efficient transmission, the transmission rate is controlled by exploiting the multi-rate capability of the IEEE 802.11 physical layer (PHY) to respond to the time-varying channel condition. In this paper, we propose a novel rate adaptation scheme, called RA-MCE, in which the transmitter estimates channel quality in the MAC layer to enhance throughput performance without the need to use the RTS-CTS mechanism nor to modify the IEEE 802.11 standard. RA-MCE adaptively controls the transmission rate according to the estimated channel quality by the MAC layer channel quality estimator (MCE) that uses only local MAC layer measurements. Through extensive simulations, we validate the accuracy of MCE and evaluate the performance of RA-MCE to show that it achieves higher throughput performance than other rate adaptation schemes under various circumstances.

  • Cross-Layer Optimized Rate Adaptation for Video over Wireless Multi-Rate Networks

    Jong-Ok KIM  Hideki TODE  

     
    PAPER-Terrestrial Wireless Communication/Broadcasting Technologies

      Vol:
    E94-B No:7
      Page(s):
    2051-2061

    In wireless networks, the mechanism to adaptively select a link transmission rate based on channel variations is referred to as RA (rate adaptation). The operation may have a critical impact on the upper-layer application, specifically video streaming which has strict QoS requirements. Thus, RA should consider the QoS requirements and radio conditions at the same time. In this paper, we present a CV-RA (cross-layer video-oriented rate adaptation) scheme for video transmission over multi-rate wireless networks. The transmission rate is switched in a cross-layer optimized way, by simultaneously considering video R-D (rate-distortion) characteristics as well as wireless conditions. At the radio link layer, transmission rate selection is made using cross-layer optimization. As a result of RA, the effective link throughput dynamically changes. At the application layer, video source rate is adaptively controlled using cross-layer adaptation. CV-RA is compared to three traditional RA schemes. It can realize the highest possible visual communications for any channel condition. For the previous schemes, the variations of visual quality is high due to dynamic packet error rates. In contrast, for CV-RA, visual quality improves with the channel condition.

  • Achievable Rate of Adaptive Wireless Multicast with Antenna Diversity in Nakagami Fading Channels

    Jae Cheol PARK  Jin Soo WANG  Iickho SONG  Yun Hee KIM  

     
    LETTER-Wireless Communication Technologies

      Vol:
    E93-B No:10
      Page(s):
    2826-2829

    We derive the average achievable rate of an adaptive wireless multicast method with antenna diversity in Nakagami fading channels when the rate is selected by the minimum signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the multicast group. Based on the limiting distribution of the minimum SNR, we then derive an approximation to the average achievable rate, which provides accurate values easily in a wide range of channel parameters.

  • Analysis of the Rate-Based Channel Access Prioritization for Drive-Thru Applications in the IEEE 802.11p WAVE

    Inhye KANG  Hyogon KIM  

     
    LETTER-Network

      Vol:
    E93-B No:6
      Page(s):
    1605-1607

    In this letter, we develop an analytical model for the drive-thru applications based on the IEEE 802.11p WAVE. The model shows that prioritizing the bitrates via the 802.11e EDCA mechanism leads to significant throughput improvement.

  • A New Channel-Aware Rate Adaptation in High Speed WLANs

    Navrati SAXENA  Abhishek ROY  

     
    LETTER-Terrestrial Radio Communications

      Vol:
    E92-B No:6
      Page(s):
    2345-2348

    In this letter we propose an advanced rate adaptation algorithm that intelligently uses the channel statistics to make fast and efficient selection of transmission rates. Our implementation and simulation results prove that the proposed strategy achieves major latency and throughput improvements on 802.11n products and existing related protocols. The entire work is on a software module, thus providing adaptability, cost-effectiveness, with no hardware changes.

  • A Cross-Layer Design of User Cooperation for Rate Adaptive Wireless Local Area Networks

    Akeo MASUDA  Shigeru SHIMAMOTO  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E92-B No:3
      Page(s):
    776-783

    In this paper, we propose a cross-layer design of packet level cooperation for wireless LANs that support rate adaptation. While keeping compatibility with legacy wireless LANs, distributed control of multi-hop packet transmission is enabled without pre-negotiation of routing or pairing. These features are provided by prioritization scheme based on IEEE 802.11e EDCF in which we set the parameters according to the measured link condition at each terminal. Relaying packets with high transmission rate makes much efficient use of radio resource, and it leads not only to improve performance of the total system, but also to overcome the fairness issue known in rate adaptation, where the terminals with good link conditions cannot gain enough resource because of the time consumed by low data rate transmission. These advantages are confirmed through computer simulations considering packet error rate at each transmission which is assumed by receiving power calculated from the distance between source, relay, and destination terminals. Furthermore, we also discuss about the fairness between cooperation-enabled and legacy terminals when they coexist in the same system, in order to make gradual deployment feasible.

  • An Opportunistic Forwarding Scheme Exploiting both Long Progress and Adaptive Rate in Wireless Networks

    Suhua TANG  Mehdad N. SHIRAZI  Oyunchimeg SHAGDAR  Ryutaro SUZUKI  Sadao OBANA  

     
    PAPER-Network

      Vol:
    E91-B No:10
      Page(s):
    3241-3250

    In Mobile Ad hoc Networks (MANET) geographic routing is characterized by local forwarding decision. Links with a long progress are preferred under the greedy forwarding rule. However in a real system long links tend to have a high packet loss rate due to multipath fading. A sub-optimal solution may separately exploit path diversity or rate adaptation. In this paper we study channel efficiency of multi-hop forwarding and try to jointly optimize rate adaptation and forwarder selection in geographic routing by the tradeoff between progress and instantaneous rate. We define a new metric -- Bit Transfer Speed (BTS) -- as the ratio of the progress made towards the destination to the equivalent time taken to transfer a payload bit. This metric takes overhead, rate and progress into account. Then we propose a packet forwarding scheme that Opportunistically exploits both long Progress and Adaptive Rate (OPAR) by a cross-layer design of routing and MAC. In OPAR each node selects for a packet the forwarder with the highest BTS. The forwarder changes as local topology (progress), packet size (overhead ratio) or channel state (data rate) varies. Simulation results show that compared with the normalized advance (NADV) [7] scheme and contention-based forwarding (CBF) [17] scheme, OPAR has lower packet loss and can effectively reduce channel occupation time by over 30% in the scenario with moderate mobility speeds.

  • Rate Adaptation Based on Collision Probability for IEEE 802.11 WLANs

    Taejoon KIM  Jong-Tae LIM  

     
    LETTER-Terrestrial Radio Communications

      Vol:
    E91-B No:4
      Page(s):
    1227-1230

    Nowadays IEEE 802.11 wireless local area networks (WLANs) support multiple transmission rates. To achieve the best performance, transmitting stations adopt the various forms of automatic rate fallback (ARF). However, ARF suffers from severe performance degradation as the number of transmitting stations increases. In this paper, we propose a new rate adaptation scheme which adjusts the ARF's up/down threshold according to the channel contention level. Simulation result shows that the proposed scheme achieves fairly good performance compared with the existing schemes.

  • A Rate Adaptive Multicast Protocol for Providing MAC Layer Reliability in WLANs

    Anas BASALAMAH  Hiroki SUGIMOTO  Takuro SATO  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E89-B No:10
      Page(s):
    2733-2740

    IEEE802.11b standard provides 1, 2, 5.5, 11 Mbps data rates. These data rates can be made possible by using different modulation techniques: DBPSK, DQPSK, CCK5.5 and CCK11 respectively. Rate adaptation is the process of dynamically selecting a proper modulation scheme depending on channel conditions in order to improve total throughput. Current rate adaptation protocols deal with unicast links rather than multicast. Measuring the received Signal Strength (RSS) of a feedback message (CTS, ACK) to estimate the receiver's link condition, can be one way to do this. A receiver may send its channel condition information to the sender allowing it to adapt its data rate for the following transmission. IEEE802.11 standard however, does not provide feedback messages for MAC layer recovery on multicast frames. This is due to collisions occurring if multicast group members simultaneously initiate a feedback message. Therefore, in order to link adapt multicast, a reliable multicast MAC protocol has to be introduced. In this paper, we propose a Rate Adaptive Multicast (RAM) protocol which provides reliability to WLANs and enhances its throughput by using Rate Adaptation. Further, we evaluate our protocol by throughput analysis and computer simulation. Simulation results suggest that our protocol performs better than related/existing protocols in both throughput as well as reliability.

  • A Game-Theoretical Power and Rate Control for Wireless Ad Hoc Networks with Step-up Price

    Qing CHEN  Zhisheng NIU  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E88-B No:9
      Page(s):
    3515-3523

    In contention-based wireless ad hoc networks, power control is an efficient way to improve the spatial reuse by allowing multiple pairs to communicate simultaneously. In this paper, we propose a game-theoretical approach for joint power and rate control in ad hoc networks, where the transmit rate of each link is maximized. Meanwhile we consider the transmit power as the cost, since higher power leads to higher interference and more energy consumption. In particular, we introduce a novel auction-like pricing algorithm in which the cost per unit power steps up until the network settles down at a Nash equilibrium, which is a feasible power and rate allocation, even when the Signal to Interference and Noise Ratio (SINR) requirements are initially infeasible. Numerical results show significant throughput improvement and energy consumption savings compared with the previously proposed algorithm that defers the link with minimum SINR.

  • Tradeoff between Area Spectral Efficiency and End-to-End Throughput in Rate-Adaptive Multihop Radio Networks

    Koji YAMAMOTO  Susumu YOSHIDA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E88-B No:9
      Page(s):
    3532-3540

    We investigate the impact of symbol rate control, modulation level control, and the number of hops on the area spectral efficiency of interference-limited multihop radio networks. By controlling symbol rate and modulation level, data rate can be adapted according to received power. In addition, varying the number of hops can control received power. First, we evaluate the achievable end-to-end throughput of multihop transmission assuming symbol rate and modulation level control. Numerical results reveal that by controlling symbol rate or using multihop transmission, the end-to-end communication range can be extended at the cost of end-to-end throughput, and this may result in lower area spectral efficiency. Next, an expression for the area spectral efficiency of multihop radio networks is derived as a function of the number of hops and the end-to-end throughput. Numerical results also reveal that the resulting area spectral efficiency depends on the specific circumstances, which, however, can be increased only by using multihop transmission.

1-20hit(22hit)