NIMay 11

Is DRL-based MAC Ready for Underwater Acoustic Networks? Exploring Its Practicality in Real Field Experiments

arXiv:2605.1014411.3
Predicted impact top 24% in NI · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For researchers and engineers working on underwater acoustic networks, this work provides a practical DRL-based MAC protocol validated in real field experiments, addressing the gap between theoretical DRL proposals and real-world applicability.

The paper identifies challenges in applying DRL to MAC protocols for underwater acoustic networks (UANs) through real field experiments, and proposes EA-MAC, a DRL-based protocol that handles observation loss and balances reward factors. Real-world experiments show EA-MAC achieves high throughput and fair communication.

Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols rely on neighbor and environment information to design collision-free access rules for Underwater Acoustic Networks (UANs). Acquiring this information suffers from high communication overhead due to the unique underwater acoustic channel characteristics, such as long propagation delay, spatiotemporal variations in communication quality, and high attenuation. Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) is promising to circumvent the UANs' physical constraints and provide a low-overhead solution for underwater MAC protocols, since it can decide access rules based on real-time observation without extra information exchange. However, the unique underwater acoustic channel characteristics impose significant challenges on observation acquisition, training time, and the balance of multiple reward factors for DRL-based MAC protocols. Most existing methods remain at the theoretical level: (1) they design partial intelligent agents failing to achieve fully autonomous access; (2) they assume unreasonable simulation scenarios, weakening the effects of underwater acoustic channel characteristics on MAC protocols. To enhance the practicality of DRL-based MAC protocols, we first analyze the application challenges of DRL in UANs through real field experiments. Based on the above challenges, we propose a DRL-based MAC protocol that considers observation loss and balances multiple reward factors to achieve efficient Entire Autonomous access in the UAN (EA-MAC). To further explore the feasibility of DRL-based MAC protocols, we implement EA-MAC and other state-of-the-art protocols on underwater acoustic modems and evaluate their performance in real field experiments. Experimental results demonstrate that EA-MAC can adaptively determine the scheduling sequence for each node, enabling high-throughput and fair communication in a straightforward manner for UANs.

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