SYITLGNIMar 25, 2024

Semantic-Aware Remote Estimation of Multiple Markov Sources Under Constraints

arXiv:2403.16855v233 citationsh-index: 8IEEE Trans Commun
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses efficient resource allocation in networked control systems by incorporating semantics, offering incremental improvements over traditional equal-treatment approaches.

The paper tackles the problem of remote estimation of multiple Markov sources over a constrained channel by exploiting semantic information to minimize state-dependent estimation errors, showing that semantic-aware policies achieve optimal performance with fewer transmissions.

This paper studies the remote estimation of multiple Markov sources over a lossy and rate-constrained channel. Unlike most existing studies that treat all source states equally, we exploit the \emph{semantics of information} and consider that the remote actuator has different tolerances for the estimation errors. We aim to find an optimal scheduling policy that minimizes the long-term \textit{state-dependent} costs of estimation errors under a transmission frequency constraint. The optimal scheduling problem is formulated as a \emph{constrained Markov decision process} (CMDP). We show that the optimal Lagrangian cost follows a piece-wise linear and concave (PWLC) function, and the optimal policy is, at most, a randomized mixture of two simple deterministic policies. By exploiting the structural results, we develop a new \textit{intersection search} algorithm that finds the optimal policy using only a few iterations. We further propose a reinforcement learning (RL) algorithm to compute the optimal policy without knowing \textit{a priori} the channel and source statistics. To avoid the ``curse of dimensionality" in MDPs, we propose an online low-complexity \textit{drift-plus-penalty} (DPP) algorithm. Numerical results show that continuous transmission is inefficient, and remarkably, our semantic-aware policies can attain the optimum by strategically utilizing fewer transmissions by exploiting the timing of the important information.

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