NIAIJul 30, 2020

Swarm Intelligence for Next-Generation Wireless Networks: Recent Advances and Applications

arXiv:2007.15221v116 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This is an incremental review paper for researchers in wireless networks and AI, summarizing existing SI applications without proposing novel methods.

The paper addresses the challenge of optimizing next-generation wireless networks (NGN) by reviewing the integration of swarm intelligence (SI) techniques, highlighting their potential applications in areas like spectrum management and resource allocation, but does not present new experimental results or concrete performance numbers.

Due to the proliferation of smart devices and emerging applications, many next-generation technologies have been paid for the development of wireless networks. Even though commercial 5G has just been widely deployed in some countries, there have been initial efforts from academia and industrial communities for 6G systems. In such a network, a very large number of devices and applications are emerged, along with heterogeneity of technologies, architectures, mobile data, etc., and optimizing such a network is of utmost importance. Besides convex optimization and game theory, swarm intelligence (SI) has recently appeared as a promising optimization tool for wireless networks. As a new subdivision of artificial intelligence, SI is inspired by the collective behaviors of societies of biological species. In SI, simple agents with limited capabilities would achieve intelligent strategies for high-dimensional and challenging problems, so it has recently found many applications in next-generation wireless networks (NGN). However, researchers may not be completely aware of the full potential of SI techniques. In this work, our primary focus will be the integration of these two domains: NGN and SI. Firstly, we provide an overview of SI techniques from fundamental concepts to well-known optimizers. Secondly, we review the applications of SI to settle emerging issues in NGN, including spectrum management and resource allocation, wireless caching and edge computing, network security, and several other miscellaneous issues. Finally, we highlight open challenges and issues in the literature, and introduce some interesting directions for future research.

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