NIAug 13, 2024Code
DiffSG: A Generative Solver for Network Optimization with Diffusion ModelRuihuai Liang, Bo Yang, Zhiwen Yu et al.
Generative diffusion models, famous for their performance in image generation, are popular in various cross-domain applications. However, their use in the communication community has been mostly limited to auxiliary tasks like data modeling and feature extraction. These models hold greater promise for fundamental problems in network optimization compared to traditional machine learning methods. Discriminative deep learning often falls short due to its single-step input-output mapping and lack of global awareness of the solution space, especially given the complexity of network optimization's objective functions. In contrast, generative diffusion models can consider a broader range of solutions and exhibit stronger generalization by learning parameters that describe the distribution of the underlying solution space, with higher probabilities assigned to better solutions. We propose a new framework Diffusion Model-based Solution Generation (DiffSG), which leverages the intrinsic distribution learning capabilities of generative diffusion models to learn high-quality solution distributions based on given inputs. The optimal solution within this distribution is highly probable, allowing it to be effectively reached through repeated sampling. We validate the performance of DiffSG on several typical network optimization problems, including mixed-integer non-linear programming, convex optimization, and hierarchical non-convex optimization. Our results demonstrate that DiffSG outperforms existing baseline methods not only on in-domain inputs but also on out-of-domain inputs. In summary, we demonstrate the potential of generative diffusion models in tackling complex network optimization problems and outline a promising path for their broader application in the communication community. Our code is available at https://github.com/qiyu3816/DiffSG.
NIMar 15Code
Cross-Problem Solving for Network Optimization: Is Problem-Aware Learning the Key?Ruihuai Liang, Bo Yang, Pengyu Chen et al.
As intelligent network services continue to diversify, ensuring efficient and adaptive resource allocation in edge networks has become increasingly critical. Yet the wide functional variations across services often give rise to new and unforeseen optimization problems, rendering traditional manual modeling and solver design both time-consuming and inflexible. This limitation reveals a key gap between current methods and human solving - the inability to recognize and understand problem characteristics. It raises the question of whether problem-aware learning can bridge this gap and support effective cross-problem generalization. To answer this question, we propose a problem-aware diffusion (PAD) model, which leverages a problem-aware learning framework to enable cross-problem generalization. By explicitly encoding the mathematical formulations of optimization problems into token-level embeddings, PAD empowers the model to understand and adapt to problem structures. Extensive experiments across ten representative network optimization problems show that PAD generalizes well to unseen problems while avoiding the inefficiency of building new solvers from scratch, yet still delivering competitive solution quality. Meanwhile, an auxiliary constraint-aware module is designed to enforce solution validity further. The experiments indicate that problem-aware learning opens a promising direction toward general-purpose solvers for intelligent network operation and resource management. Our code is open source at https://github.com/qiyu3816/PAD.
LGNov 1, 2024Code
Diffusion Models as Network Optimizers: Explorations and AnalysisRuihuai Liang, Bo Yang, Pengyu Chen et al.
Network optimization is a fundamental challenge in the Internet of Things (IoT) network, often characterized by complex features that make it difficult to solve these problems. Recently, generative diffusion models (GDMs) have emerged as a promising new approach to network optimization, with the potential to directly address these optimization problems. However, the application of GDMs in this field is still in its early stages, and there is a noticeable lack of theoretical research and empirical findings. In this study, we first explore the intrinsic characteristics of generative models. Next, we provide a concise theoretical proof and intuitive demonstration of the advantages of generative models over discriminative models in network optimization. Based on this exploration, we implement GDMs as optimizers aimed at learning high-quality solution distributions for given inputs, sampling from these distributions during inference to approximate or achieve optimal solutions. Specifically, we utilize denoising diffusion probabilistic models (DDPMs) and employ a classifier-free guidance mechanism to manage conditional guidance based on input parameters. We conduct extensive experiments across three challenging network optimization problems. By investigating various model configurations and the principles of GDMs as optimizers, we demonstrate the ability to overcome prediction errors and validate the convergence of generated solutions to optimal solutions. We provide code and data at https://github.com/qiyu3816/DiffSG.
NIDec 11, 2024Code
GDSG: Graph Diffusion-based Solution Generator for Optimization Problems in MEC NetworksRuihuai Liang, Bo Yang, Pengyu Chen et al.
Optimization is crucial for MEC networks to function efficiently and reliably, most of which are NP-hard and lack efficient approximation algorithms. This leads to a paucity of optimal solution, constraining the effectiveness of conventional deep learning approaches. Most existing learning-based methods necessitate extensive optimal data and fail to exploit the potential benefits of suboptimal data that can be obtained with greater efficiency and effectiveness. Taking the multi-server multi-user computation offloading (MSCO) problem, which is widely observed in systems like Internet-of-Vehicles (IoV) and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) networks, as a concrete scenario, we present a Graph Diffusion-based Solution Generation (GDSG) method. This approach is designed to work with suboptimal datasets while converging to the optimal solution large probably. We transform the optimization issue into distribution-learning and offer a clear explanation of learning from suboptimal training datasets. We build GDSG as a multi-task diffusion model utilizing a Graph Neural Network (GNN) to acquire the distribution of high-quality solutions. We use a simple and efficient heuristic approach to obtain a sufficient amount of training data composed entirely of suboptimal solutions. In our implementation, we enhance the backbone GNN and achieve improved generalization. GDSG also reaches nearly 100\% task orthogonality, ensuring no interference between the discrete and continuous generation tasks. We further reveal that this orthogonality arises from the diffusion-related training loss, rather than the neural network architecture itself. The experiments demonstrate that GDSG surpasses other benchmark methods on both the optimal and suboptimal training datasets. The MSCO datasets has open-sourced at this http URL, as well as the GDSG algorithm codes at https://github.com/qiyu3816/GDSG.
NIMar 6, 2025
Large-Scale AI in Telecom: Charting the Roadmap for Innovation, Scalability, and Enhanced Digital ExperiencesAdnan Shahid, Adrian Kliks, Ahmed Al-Tahmeesschi et al.
This white paper discusses the role of large-scale AI in the telecommunications industry, with a specific focus on the potential of generative AI to revolutionize network functions and user experiences, especially in the context of 6G systems. It highlights the development and deployment of Large Telecom Models (LTMs), which are tailored AI models designed to address the complex challenges faced by modern telecom networks. The paper covers a wide range of topics, from the architecture and deployment strategies of LTMs to their applications in network management, resource allocation, and optimization. It also explores the regulatory, ethical, and standardization considerations for LTMs, offering insights into their future integration into telecom infrastructure. The goal is to provide a comprehensive roadmap for the adoption of LTMs to enhance scalability, performance, and user-centric innovation in telecom networks.
NIJun 27, 2025
Joint Task Offloading and Resource Allocation in Low-Altitude MEC via Graph Attention DiffusionYifan Xue, Ruihuai Liang, Bo Yang et al.
With the rapid development of the low-altitude economy, air-ground integrated multi-access edge computing (MEC) systems are facing increasing demands for real-time and intelligent task scheduling. In such systems, task offloading and resource allocation encounter multiple challenges, including node heterogeneity, unstable communication links, and dynamic task variations. To address these issues, this paper constructs a three-layer heterogeneous MEC system architecture for low-altitude economic networks, encompassing aerial and ground users as well as edge servers. The system is systematically modeled from the perspectives of communication channels, computational costs, and constraint conditions, and the joint optimization problem of offloading decisions and resource allocation is uniformly abstracted into a graph-structured modeling task. On this basis, we propose a graph attention diffusion-based solution generator (GADSG). This method integrates the contextual awareness of graph attention networks with the solution distribution learning capability of diffusion models, enabling joint modeling and optimization of discrete offloading variables and continuous resource allocation variables within a high-dimensional latent space. We construct multiple simulation datasets with varying scales and topologies. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed GADSG model significantly outperforms existing baseline methods in terms of optimization performance, robustness, and generalization across task structures, showing strong potential for efficient task scheduling in dynamic and complex low-altitude economic network environments.
LGOct 21, 2025
Joint Optimization of Cooperation Efficiency and Communication Covertness for Target Detection with AUVsXueyao Zhang, Bo Yang, Zhiwen Yu et al.
This paper investigates underwater cooperative target detection using autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), with a focus on the critical trade-off between cooperation efficiency and communication covertness. To tackle this challenge, we first formulate a joint trajectory and power control optimization problem, and then present an innovative hierarchical action management framework to solve it. According to the hierarchical formulation, at the macro level, the master AUV models the agent selection process as a Markov decision process and deploys the proximal policy optimization algorithm for strategic task allocation. At the micro level, each selected agent's decentralized decision-making is modeled as a partially observable Markov decision process, and a multi-agent proximal policy optimization algorithm is used to dynamically adjust its trajectory and transmission power based on its local observations. Under the centralized training and decentralized execution paradigm, our target detection framework enables adaptive covert cooperation while satisfying both energy and mobility constraints. By comprehensively modeling the considered system, the involved signals and tasks, as well as energy consumption, theoretical insights and practical solutions for the efficient and secure operation of multiple AUVs are provided, offering significant implications for the execution of underwater covert communication tasks.
LGMar 25, 2025
Multi-Agent Deep Reinforcement Learning for Safe Autonomous Driving with RICS-Assisted MECXueyao Zhang, Bo Yang, Xuelin Cao et al.
Environment sensing and fusion via onboard sensors are envisioned to be widely applied in future autonomous driving networks. This paper considers a vehicular system with multiple self-driving vehicles that is assisted by multi-access edge computing (MEC), where image data collected by the sensors is offloaded from cellular vehicles to the MEC server using vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) links. Sensory data can also be shared among surrounding vehicles via vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication links. To improve spectrum utilization, the V2V links may reuse the same frequency spectrum with V2I links, which may cause severe interference. To tackle this issue, we leverage reconfigurable intelligent computational surfaces (RICSs) to jointly enable V2I reflective links and mitigate interference appearing at the V2V links. Considering the limitations of traditional algorithms in addressing this problem, such as the assumption for quasi-static channel state information, which restricts their ability to adapt to dynamic environmental changes and leads to poor performance under frequently varying channel conditions, in this paper, we formulate the problem at hand as a Markov game. Our novel formulation is applied to time-varying channels subject to multi-user interference and introduces a collaborative learning mechanism among users. The considered optimization problem is solved via a driving safety-enabled multi-agent deep reinforcement learning (DS-MADRL) approach that capitalizes on the RICS presence. Our extensive numerical investigations showcase that the proposed reinforcement learning approach achieves faster convergence and significant enhancements in both data rate and driving safety, as compared to various state-of-the-art benchmarks.
LGJan 2, 2025
Multi-task Domain Adaptation for Computation Offloading in Edge-intelligence NetworksRunxin Han, Bo Yang, Zhiwen Yu et al.
In the field of multi-access edge computing (MEC), efficient computation offloading is crucial for improving resource utilization and reducing latency in dynamically changing environments. This paper introduces a new approach, termed as Multi-Task Domain Adaptation (MTDA), aiming to enhance the ability of computational offloading models to generalize in the presence of domain shifts, i.e., when new data in the target environment significantly differs from the data in the source domain. The proposed MTDA model incorporates a teacher-student architecture that allows continuous adaptation without necessitating access to the source domain data during inference, thereby maintaining privacy and reducing computational overhead. Utilizing a multi-task learning framework that simultaneously manages offloading decisions and resource allocation, the proposed MTDA approach outperforms benchmark methods regarding mean squared error and accuracy, particularly in environments with increasing numbers of users. It is observed by means of computer simulation that the proposed MTDA model maintains high performance across various scenarios, demonstrating its potential for practical deployment in emerging MEC applications.
NIFeb 21, 2024
Computation Offloading for Multi-server Multi-access Edge Vehicular Networks: A DDQN-based MethodSiyu Wang, Bo Yang, Zhiwen Yu et al.
In this paper, we investigate a multi-user offloading problem in the overlapping domain of a multi-server mobile edge computing system. We divide the original problem into two stages: the offloading decision making stage and the request scheduling stage. To prevent the terminal from going out of service area during offloading, we consider the mobility parameter of the terminal according to the human behaviour model when making the offloading decision, and then introduce a server evaluation mechanism based on both the mobility parameter and the server load to select the optimal offloading server. In order to fully utilise the server resources, we design a double deep Q-network (DDQN)-based reward evaluation algorithm that considers the priority of tasks when scheduling offload requests. Finally, numerical simulations are conducted to verify that our proposed method outperforms traditional mathematical computation methods as well as the DQN algorithm.
SPSep 2, 2023
A Multi-Head Ensemble Multi-Task Learning Approach for Dynamical Computation OffloadingRuihuai Liang, Bo Yang, Zhiwen Yu et al.
Computation offloading has become a popular solution to support computationally intensive and latency-sensitive applications by transferring computing tasks to mobile edge servers (MESs) for execution, which is known as mobile/multi-access edge computing (MEC). To improve the MEC performance, it is required to design an optimal offloading strategy that includes offloading decision (i.e., whether offloading or not) and computational resource allocation of MEC. The design can be formulated as a mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP) problem, which is generally NP-hard and its effective solution can be obtained by performing online inference through a well-trained deep neural network (DNN) model. However, when the system environments change dynamically, the DNN model may lose efficacy due to the drift of input parameters, thereby decreasing the generalization ability of the DNN model. To address this unique challenge, in this paper, we propose a multi-head ensemble multi-task learning (MEMTL) approach with a shared backbone and multiple prediction heads (PHs). Specifically, the shared backbone will be invariant during the PHs training and the inferred results will be ensembled, thereby significantly reducing the required training overhead and improving the inference performance. As a result, the joint optimization problem for offloading decision and resource allocation can be efficiently solved even in a time-varying wireless environment. Experimental results show that the proposed MEMTL outperforms benchmark methods in both the inference accuracy and mean square error without requiring additional training data.
NIApr 19, 2021
A Joint Energy and Latency Framework for Transfer Learning over 5G Industrial Edge NetworksBo Yang, Omobayode Fagbohungbe, Xuelin Cao et al.
In this paper, we propose a transfer learning (TL)-enabled edge-CNN framework for 5G industrial edge networks with privacy-preserving characteristic. In particular, the edge server can use the existing image dataset to train the CNN in advance, which is further fine-tuned based on the limited datasets uploaded from the devices. With the aid of TL, the devices that are not participating in the training only need to fine-tune the trained edge-CNN model without training from scratch. Due to the energy budget of the devices and the limited communication bandwidth, a joint energy and latency problem is formulated, which is solved by decomposing the original problem into an uploading decision subproblem and a wireless bandwidth allocation subproblem. Experiments using ImageNet demonstrate that the proposed TL-enabled edge-CNN framework can achieve almost 85% prediction accuracy of the baseline by uploading only about 1% model parameters, for a compression ratio of 32 of the autoencoder.
IVAug 18, 2020
Offloading Optimization in Edge Computing for Deep Learning Enabled Target Tracking by Internet-of-UAVsBo Yang, Xuelin Cao, Chau Yuen et al.
The empowering unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have been extensively used in providing intelligence such as target tracking. In our field experiments, a pre-trained convolutional neural network (CNN) is deployed at the UAV to identify a target (a vehicle) from the captured video frames and enable the UAV to keep tracking. However, this kind of visual target tracking demands a lot of computational resources due to the desired high inference accuracy and stringent delay requirement. This motivates us to consider offloading this type of deep learning (DL) tasks to a mobile edge computing (MEC) server due to limited computational resource and energy budget of the UAV, and further improve the inference accuracy. Specifically, we propose a novel hierarchical DL tasks distribution framework, where the UAV is embedded with lower layers of the pre-trained CNN model, while the MEC server with rich computing resources will handle the higher layers of the CNN model. An optimization problem is formulated to minimize the weighted-sum cost including the tracking delay and energy consumption introduced by communication and computing of the UAVs, while taking into account the quality of data (e.g., video frames) input to the DL model and the inference errors. Analytical results are obtained and insights are provided to understand the tradeoff between the weighted-sum cost and inference error rate in the proposed framework. Numerical results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed offloading framework.
SPJun 29, 2020
Computation Offloading in Multi-Access Edge Computing Networks: A Multi-Task Learning ApproachBo Yang, Xuelin Cao, Joshua Bassey et al.
Multi-access edge computing (MEC) has already shown the potential in enabling mobile devices to bear the computation-intensive applications by offloading some tasks to a nearby access point (AP) integrated with a MEC server (MES). However, due to the varying network conditions and limited computation resources of the MES, the offloading decisions taken by a mobile device and the computational resources allocated by the MES may not be efficiently achieved with the lowest cost. In this paper, we propose a dynamic offloading framework for the MEC network, in which the uplink non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) is used to enable multiple devices to upload their tasks via the same frequency band. We formulate the offloading decision problem as a multiclass classification problem and formulate the MES computational resource allocation problem as a regression problem. Then a multi-task learning based feedforward neural network (MTFNN) model is designed to jointly optimize the offloading decision and computational resource allocation. Numerical results illustrate that the proposed MTFNN outperforms the conventional optimization method in terms of inference accuracy and computation complexity.
LGJun 27, 2020
Lessons Learned from Accident of Autonomous Vehicle Testing: An Edge Learning-aided Offloading FrameworkBo Yang, Xuelin Cao, Xiangfang Li et al.
This letter proposes an edge learning-based offloading framework for autonomous driving, where the deep learning tasks can be offloaded to the edge server to improve the inference accuracy while meeting the latency constraint. Since the delay and the inference accuracy are incurred by wireless communications and computing, an optimization problem is formulated to maximize the inference accuracy subject to the offloading probability, the pre-braking probability, and data quality. Simulations demonstrate the superiority of the proposed offloading framework.