NILGMar 20, 2025

Energy-Efficient Federated Learning and Migration in Digital Twin Edge Networks

arXiv:2503.15822v13 citationsh-index: 8IEEE Trans Cogn Commun Netw
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses energy efficiency and privacy in federated learning for 6G digital twin networks, but it is incremental as it builds on existing FL and optimization methods.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing digital twin association and historical data allocation for federated learning tasks in digital twin edge networks, aiming to jointly maximize data utility and minimize energy costs, with numerical results showing it outperforms baseline approaches.

The digital twin edge network (DITEN) is a significant paradigm in the sixth-generation wireless system (6G) that aims to organize well-developed infrastructures to meet the requirements of evolving application scenarios. However, the impact of the interaction between the long-term DITEN maintenance and detailed digital twin tasks, which often entail privacy considerations, is commonly overlooked in current research. This paper addresses this issue by introducing a problem of digital twin association and historical data allocation for a federated learning (FL) task within DITEN. To achieve this goal, we start by introducing a closed-form function to predict the training accuracy of the FL task, referring to it as the data utility. Subsequently, we carry out comprehensive convergence analyses on the proposed FL methodology. Our objective is to jointly optimize the data utility of the digital twin-empowered FL task and the energy costs incurred by the long-term DITEN maintenance, encompassing FL model training, data synchronization, and twin migration. To tackle the aforementioned challenge, we present an optimization-driven learning algorithm that effectively identifies optimized solutions for the formulated problem. Numerical results demonstrate that our proposed algorithm outperforms various baseline approaches.

Foundations

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

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