Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks

Due to the shared nature of the wireless media, the wireless users in a network naturally interact with each other and thus a ect the transmissions of each other. The aim of this thesis is to illustrate the crucial role of user interaction in designing effcient interference-aware communication schem...

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Main Author: Che, Yueling
Other Authors: Yi Gong
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/61723
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-61723
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Che, Yueling
Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
description Due to the shared nature of the wireless media, the wireless users in a network naturally interact with each other and thus a ect the transmissions of each other. The aim of this thesis is to illustrate the crucial role of user interaction in designing effcient interference-aware communication schemes in wireless networks, from both user-centric and network-centric points of view. Specically, this thesis investigates various key issues on exploring wireless user interaction, such as tradeo analysis, co-existence criterion, algorithm complexity, and system capacity characterization, for wireless networks consisting of homogeneous and heterogeneous users, respectively. This thesis also demonstrates the usefulness of two mathematical tools, stochastic geometry and dynamic programming, and shows their effectiveness in designing efficient communication schemes in interference-aware wireless networks. First, in an ad hoc network consisting of homogeneous wireless users, to guide the transmit interaction between users, this thesis proposes a transmission scheme with signal-to-interference-ratio (SIR) threshold based scheduling. This thesis considers a stochastic ad hoc network, where the locations of the transmitters and receivers as well as the channel fading between any transmitter and receiver are randomly distributed. By using tools from stochastic geometry, this thesis focuses on analyzing the effects of user interaction on the ad hoc network capacity. Specifically, this thesis adopts a homogeneous Poisson Point Process (PPP) to model the locations of transmitters that have the intention to transmit. Due to the SIR-threshold based scheduling, it is shown that the resulting point process formed by the transmitters that are allowed to transmit is a non-PPP in general. This thesis tackles the challenges on analyzing the non-PPP based network, by proposing a new method to approximately characterizing the non-PPP network capacity. Such method is useful for analyzing performance of wireless networks with interacted transmitters. Moreover, this thesis reveals the exact/approximate dependence between the system performance and the system designing parameters, which gives designing insights for networks with SIR-threshold based scheduling. Next, in a cognitive radio (CR) network consisting of secondary users (SUs) and primary users (PUs), this thesis assumes that the PUs are able to react to the SU's collision or interference by adapting its transmit power level and/or adjusting its channel access probability. Such PUs are referred to as reactive PUs, to differentiate from their non-reactive counterparts. This thesis proposes a 4-state Markov chain to model the channel occupancy of the reactive PU. Under a practical scenario where the PU's channel occupancy status is only partially known to the SUs, this thesis studies the opportunistic spectrum access (OSA) design for the SU, by adopting two methods to protect the reactive PU's transmission, respectively. One is the conventional short-term conditional collision probability (SCCP) constraint, and the other is a long-term PU throughput (LPUT) constraint. By exploiting a separation principle to separate the SU's channel selection from its spectrum sensor design and channel access decision on the selected channel without loss of optimality, an optimal OSA policy under the SCCP constraint and a suboptimal OSA policy under the LPUT constraint are obtained in this thesis, respectively. It is shown that the conventional SCCP constraint, which is effective in protecting the non-reactive PUs, is not able to properly protect the reactive PUs, while the LPUT constraint can provide sufficient protection for the reactive PU's transmission. Interesting tradeo between SU throughput maximization and PU transmission protection are also revealed in this thesis.
author2 Yi Gong
author_facet Yi Gong
Che, Yueling
format Theses and Dissertations
author Che, Yueling
author_sort Che, Yueling
title Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
title_short Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
title_full Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
title_fullStr Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
title_full_unstemmed Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
title_sort exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/61723
_version_ 1772827872929513472
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-617232023-07-04T16:06:15Z Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks Che, Yueling Yi Gong School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Rui Zhang DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Due to the shared nature of the wireless media, the wireless users in a network naturally interact with each other and thus a ect the transmissions of each other. The aim of this thesis is to illustrate the crucial role of user interaction in designing effcient interference-aware communication schemes in wireless networks, from both user-centric and network-centric points of view. Specically, this thesis investigates various key issues on exploring wireless user interaction, such as tradeo analysis, co-existence criterion, algorithm complexity, and system capacity characterization, for wireless networks consisting of homogeneous and heterogeneous users, respectively. This thesis also demonstrates the usefulness of two mathematical tools, stochastic geometry and dynamic programming, and shows their effectiveness in designing efficient communication schemes in interference-aware wireless networks. First, in an ad hoc network consisting of homogeneous wireless users, to guide the transmit interaction between users, this thesis proposes a transmission scheme with signal-to-interference-ratio (SIR) threshold based scheduling. This thesis considers a stochastic ad hoc network, where the locations of the transmitters and receivers as well as the channel fading between any transmitter and receiver are randomly distributed. By using tools from stochastic geometry, this thesis focuses on analyzing the effects of user interaction on the ad hoc network capacity. Specifically, this thesis adopts a homogeneous Poisson Point Process (PPP) to model the locations of transmitters that have the intention to transmit. Due to the SIR-threshold based scheduling, it is shown that the resulting point process formed by the transmitters that are allowed to transmit is a non-PPP in general. This thesis tackles the challenges on analyzing the non-PPP based network, by proposing a new method to approximately characterizing the non-PPP network capacity. Such method is useful for analyzing performance of wireless networks with interacted transmitters. Moreover, this thesis reveals the exact/approximate dependence between the system performance and the system designing parameters, which gives designing insights for networks with SIR-threshold based scheduling. Next, in a cognitive radio (CR) network consisting of secondary users (SUs) and primary users (PUs), this thesis assumes that the PUs are able to react to the SU's collision or interference by adapting its transmit power level and/or adjusting its channel access probability. Such PUs are referred to as reactive PUs, to differentiate from their non-reactive counterparts. This thesis proposes a 4-state Markov chain to model the channel occupancy of the reactive PU. Under a practical scenario where the PU's channel occupancy status is only partially known to the SUs, this thesis studies the opportunistic spectrum access (OSA) design for the SU, by adopting two methods to protect the reactive PU's transmission, respectively. One is the conventional short-term conditional collision probability (SCCP) constraint, and the other is a long-term PU throughput (LPUT) constraint. By exploiting a separation principle to separate the SU's channel selection from its spectrum sensor design and channel access decision on the selected channel without loss of optimality, an optimal OSA policy under the SCCP constraint and a suboptimal OSA policy under the LPUT constraint are obtained in this thesis, respectively. It is shown that the conventional SCCP constraint, which is effective in protecting the non-reactive PUs, is not able to properly protect the reactive PUs, while the LPUT constraint can provide sufficient protection for the reactive PU's transmission. Interesting tradeo between SU throughput maximization and PU transmission protection are also revealed in this thesis. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (EEE) 2014-08-27T01:10:43Z 2014-08-27T01:10:43Z 2014 2014 Thesis Che, Y. (2014). Exploiting user interaction in interference-aware wireless networks. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/61723 10.32657/10356/61723 en 176 p. application/pdf