73.3NIMay 6Code
Look Once, Beam Twice: Camera-Primed Real-Time Double-Directional mmWave Beam Management for Vehicular ConnectivityAvhishek Biswas, Apala Pramanik, Eylem Ekici et al.
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequencies promise multi-gigabit connectivity for vehicle-to-everything (V2X) networks, but face challenges in terms of severe path loss and mobility-related beam misalignment. Reliable V2X connectivity requires fast, double-directional beam alignment. However, existing methods suffer from high training overhead and limited generalization to unseen scenarios. This paper presents VIsion-based BEamforming(VIBE), a hybrid model-based, closed-loop, learning architecture for real-time double-directional mmWave beam management primed by camera sensing. VIBE fuses machine learning, model-based reasoning, and closed-loop RF feedback to balance beam-pair establishment latency with link quality. VIBE bypasses exhaustive training overhead and accelerates link establishment by leveraging camera observations to reduce the beam-search space. Lightweight beam refinement and offset tracking mechanisms adaptively refine beams in response to dynamic application requirements. VIBE is implemented and evaluated across online indoor/outdoor testbeds, public datasets, and real-time vehicular experiments, demonstrating strong generalization capabilities, making it suitable for real-time V2X communication. Comparisons with 5G NR hierarchical beamforming show that VIBE consistently maintains lower outage rates. Furthermore, VIBE outperforms state-of-the-art end-to-end ML models for beam selection when evaluated on public datasets and achieves outage rates as low as 1.1-1.4 %. The results show that a hybrid model-based, closed-loop learning architecture is better suited for real-world mmWave vehicular connectivity than end-to-end trained ML models. For reproducibility, we publish our code to https://github.com/UNL-CPN-Lab/Look-Once-Beam-Twice.
13.3DCMay 19
Hybrid Edge-HPC Systems for Low-Latency Data-Driven InferenceLiubov Kurafeeva, Ryan Hartung, Benjamin Carter et al.
Emerging cyber-physical systems increasingly require low-latency inference from streaming sensor data while maintaining models that reflect complex and evolving physical processes. In many domains, however, model updates depend on high-fidelity simulations and training executed on remote high-performance computing (HPC) systems under batch scheduling. This creates a fundamental mismatch between the responsiveness required at the edge and the cost, throughput, and availability of simulation-driven model updates. We present RBF (Reverse Backfill), a hybrid edge-HPC learning and inference architecture that integrates low-latency edge inference with asynchronous, simulation-driven model improvement. RBF targets simulation-bounded settings in which model updates are constrained by simulation throughput and HPC scheduling delays, and reinterprets HPC backfilling by using opportunistic computation to improve model accuracy rather than system utilization. RBF decouples inference from simulation and training by deploying lightweight surrogate models at the edge while incorporating improved models asynchronously as they become available. The architecture supports pluggable surrogate models and orchestrates computation across heterogeneous infrastructure spanning edge devices, private 5G, cloud, and HPC resources. We instantiate RBF using a real-world digital agriculture deployment that couples edge sensing with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations to infer airflow patterns in a large agricultural screenhouse. Our evaluation characterizes end-to-end system behavior under realistic constraints, quantifying simulation latency, training cost, inference throughput, and the impact of delayed model updates on prediction accuracy. Results demonstrate that RBF enables continuous, low-latency inference while improving model fidelity over time despite delayed and irregular model updates.