NILGJun 27, 2025

Joint Task Offloading and Resource Allocation in Low-Altitude MEC via Graph Attention Diffusion

arXiv:2506.21933v13 citationsh-index: 23IEEE Trans Cogn Commun Netw
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses efficient task scheduling for low-altitude economic networks, which is an incremental improvement in a domain-specific context.

The paper tackles the problem of joint task offloading and resource allocation in low-altitude multi-access edge computing systems, proposing a graph attention diffusion-based method that significantly outperforms existing baselines in optimization performance, robustness, and generalization across various simulation datasets.

With the rapid development of the low-altitude economy, air-ground integrated multi-access edge computing (MEC) systems are facing increasing demands for real-time and intelligent task scheduling. In such systems, task offloading and resource allocation encounter multiple challenges, including node heterogeneity, unstable communication links, and dynamic task variations. To address these issues, this paper constructs a three-layer heterogeneous MEC system architecture for low-altitude economic networks, encompassing aerial and ground users as well as edge servers. The system is systematically modeled from the perspectives of communication channels, computational costs, and constraint conditions, and the joint optimization problem of offloading decisions and resource allocation is uniformly abstracted into a graph-structured modeling task. On this basis, we propose a graph attention diffusion-based solution generator (GADSG). This method integrates the contextual awareness of graph attention networks with the solution distribution learning capability of diffusion models, enabling joint modeling and optimization of discrete offloading variables and continuous resource allocation variables within a high-dimensional latent space. We construct multiple simulation datasets with varying scales and topologies. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed GADSG model significantly outperforms existing baseline methods in terms of optimization performance, robustness, and generalization across task structures, showing strong potential for efficient task scheduling in dynamic and complex low-altitude economic network environments.

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