45.0NIJun 3
Dual-Mode Wireless Devices for Adaptive Pull and Push-Based CommunicationSara Cavallero, Fabio Saggese, Junya Shiraishi et al.
This paper introduces a dual-mode communication framework for wireless devices that integrates query-driven (pull) and event-driven (push) transmissions within a unified time-frame structure. Devices typically respond to information requests in pull mode, but if an anomaly is detected, they preempt the regular response to report the critical condition. Additionally, push-based communication is used to proactively send critical data without waiting for a request. This adaptive approach ensures timely, context-aware, and efficient data delivery across different network conditions. To achieve high energy efficiency, we incorporate a wake-up radio mechanism and we design a tailored medium access control (MAC) protocol that supports data traffic belonging to the different communication classes. A comprehensive system-level analysis is conducted, accounting for the wake-up control operation and evaluating three key performance metrics: the success probability of anomaly reports (push traffic), the success probability of query responses (pull traffic) and the total energy consumption. Numerical results characterize the system's behavior and highlight the inherent trade-off between push and pull success probabilities as a function of allocated communication resources. Our analysis demonstrates that the proposed approach achieves up to a 42% reduction in energy consumption per served packet compared to traditional approaches, while maintaining reliable support for both communication paradigms.
NIMar 9
Medium Access for Push-Pull Data Transmission in 6G Wireless SystemsShashi Raj Pandey, Fabio Saggese, Junya Shiraishi et al.
Medium access in 5G systems was tailored to accommodate diverse traffic classes through network resource slicing. 6G wireless systems are expected to be significantly reliant on Artificial Intelligence (AI), leading to data-driven and goal-oriented communication. This leads to augmentation of the design space for Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols, which is the focus of this article. We introduce a taxonomy based on push-based and pull-based communication, which is useful to categorize both the legacy and the AI-driven access schemes. We provide MAC protocol design guidelines for pull- and push-based communication in terms of goal-oriented criteria, such as timing and data relevance. We articulate a framework for co-existence between pull and push-based communications in 6G systems, combining their advantages. We highlight the design principles and main tradeoffs, as well as the architectural considerations for integrating these designs in Open-Radio Access Network (O-RAN) and 6G systems.
LGDec 15, 2025
Link-Aware Energy-Frugal Continual Learning for Fault Detection in IoT NetworksHenrik C. M. Frederiksen, Junya Shiraishi, Cedomir Stefanovic et al.
The use of lightweight machine learning (ML) models in internet of things (IoT) networks enables resource constrained IoT devices to perform on-device inference for several critical applications. However, the inference accuracy deteriorates due to the non-stationarity in the IoT environment and limited initial training data. To counteract this, the deployed models can be updated occasionally with new observed data samples. However, this approach consumes additional energy, which is undesirable for energy constrained IoT devices. This letter introduces an event-driven communication framework that strategically integrates continual learning (CL) in IoT networks for energy-efficient fault detection. Our framework enables the IoT device and the edge server (ES) to collaboratively update the lightweight ML model by adapting to the wireless link conditions for communication and the available energy budget. Evaluation on real-world datasets show that the proposed approach can outperform both periodic sampling and non-adaptive CL in terms of inference recall; our proposed approach achieves up to a 42.8% improvement, even under tight energy and bandwidth constraint.
NIApr 15, 2024
Decentralized Multi-Party Multi-Network AI for Global Deployment of 6G Wireless SystemsMerim Dzaferagic, Marco Ruffini, Nina Slamnik-Krijestorac et al.
Multiple visions of 6G networks elicit Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a central, native element. When 6G systems are deployed at a large scale, end-to-end AI-based solutions will necessarily have to encompass both the radio and the fiber-optical domain. This paper introduces the Decentralized Multi-Party, Multi-Network AI (DMMAI) framework for integrating AI into 6G networks deployed at scale. DMMAI harmonizes AI-driven controls across diverse network platforms and thus facilitates networks that autonomously configure, monitor, and repair themselves. This is particularly crucial at the network edge, where advanced applications meet heightened functionality and security demands. The radio/optical integration is vital due to the current compartmentalization of AI research within these domains, which lacks a comprehensive understanding of their interaction. Our approach explores multi-network orchestration and AI control integration, filling a critical gap in standardized frameworks for AI-driven coordination in 6G networks. The DMMAI framework is a step towards a global standard for AI in 6G, aiming to establish reference use cases, data and model management methods, and benchmarking platforms for future AI/ML solutions.
LGMar 8
Online Continual Learning for Anomaly Detection in IoT under Data Distribution ShiftsMatea Marinova, Shashi Raj Pandey, Junya Shiraishi et al.
In this work, we present OCLADS, a novel communication framework with continual learning (CL) for Internet of Things (IoT) anomaly detection (AD) when operating in non-stationary environments. As the statistical properties of the observed data change with time, the on-device inference model becomes obsolete, which necessitates strategic model updating. OCLADS keeps track of data distribution shifts to timely update the on-device IoT AD model. To do so, OCLADS introduces two mechanisms during the interaction between the resource-constrained IoT device and an edge server (ES): i) an intelligent sample selection mechanism at the device for data transmission, and ii) a distribution-shift detection mechanism at the ES for model updating. Experimental results with TinyML demonstrate that our proposed framework achieves high inference accuracy while realizing a significantly smaller number of model updates compared to the baseline schemes.
LGOct 16, 2025
Online Reliable Anomaly Detection via Neuromorphic Sensing and CommunicationsJunya Shiraishi, Jiechen Chen, Osvaldo Simeone et al.
This paper proposes a low-power online anomaly detection framework based on neuromorphic wireless sensor networks, encompassing possible use cases such as brain-machine interfaces and remote environmental monitoring. In the considered system, a central reader node actively queries a subset of neuromorphic sensor nodes (neuro-SNs) at each time frame. The neuromorphic sensors are event-driven, producing spikes in correspondence to relevant changes in the monitored system. The queried neuro-SNs respond to the reader with impulse radio (IR) transmissions that directly encode the sensed local events. The reader processes these event-driven signals to determine whether the monitored environment is in a normal or anomalous state, while rigorously controlling the false discovery rate (FDR) of detections below a predefined threshold. The proposed approach employs an online hypothesis testing method with e-values to maintain FDR control without requiring knowledge of the anomaly rate, and it dynamically optimizes the sensor querying strategy by casting it as a best-arm identification problem in a multi-armed bandit framework. Extensive performance evaluation demonstrates that the proposed method can reliably detect anomalies under stringent FDR requirements, while efficiently scheduling sensor communications and achieving low detection latency.
NIApr 19, 2024
Coexistence of Push Wireless Access with Pull Communication for Content-based Wake-up RadiosJunya Shiraishi, Sara Cavallero, Shashi Raj Pandey et al.
This paper considers energy-efficient connectivity for Internet of Things (IoT) devices in a coexistence scenario between two distinctive communication models: pull- and push-based. In pull-based, the base station (BS) decides when to retrieve a specific type of data from the IoT devices, while in push-based, the IoT device decides when and which data to transmit. To this end, this paper advocates introducing the content-based wake-up (CoWu), which enables the BS to remotely activate only a subset of pull-based nodes equipped with wake-up receivers, observing the relevant data. In this setup, a BS pulls data with CoWu at a specific time instance to fulfill its tasks while collecting data from the nodes operating with a push-based communication model. The resource allocation plays an important role: longer data collection duration for pull-based nodes can lead to high retrieval accuracy while decreasing the probability of data transmission success for push-based nodes, and vice versa. Numerical results show that CoWu can manage communication requirements for both pull-based and push-based nodes while realizing the high energy efficiency (up to 38%) of IoT devices, compared to the baseline scheduling method.