MMNIDec 11, 2014

Call Admission Control based on Adaptive Bandwidth Allocation for Wireless Networks

arXiv:1412.3630v170 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses QoS provisioning for multimedia traffic in wireless networks, representing an incremental improvement in call admission control.

The paper tackles the challenge of minimizing handover call dropping and new call blocking probabilities in wireless networks by proposing an adaptive multi-level bandwidth-allocation scheme for non-real-time traffic, achieving negligible handover call dropping probability without sacrificing bandwidth utilization.

Provisioning of Quality of Service (QoS) is a key issue in any multi-media system. However, in wireless systems, supporting QoS requirements of different traffic types is more challenging due to the need to minimize two performance metrics - the probability of dropping a handover call and the probability of blocking a new call. Since QoS requirements are not as stringent for non-real-time traffic types, as opposed to real-time traffic, more calls can be accommodated by releasing some bandwidth from the already admitted non-real-time traffic calls. If we require that such a released bandwidth to accept a handover call ought to be larger than the bandwidth to accept a new call, then the resulting probability of dropping a handover call will be smaller than the probability of blocking a new call. In this paper we propose an efficient Call Admission Control (CAC) that relies on adaptive multi-level bandwidth-allocation scheme for non-real-time calls. The scheme allows reduction of the call dropping probability along with increase of the bandwidth utilization. The numerical results show that the proposed scheme is capable of attaining negligible handover call dropping probability without sacrificing bandwidth utilization.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes