Optimum Priority Class Selection Under Wi-Fi/LTE Coexistence

Author(s):  
Islam Samy ◽  
Loukas Lazos
Keyword(s):  
1981 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 341-358
Author(s):  
F. Keyzer ◽  
J. Kleijnen ◽  
E. Mullenders ◽  
A. van Reeken

2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nir Perel ◽  
Uri Yechiali

The so called “Israeli Queue” is a single server polling system with batch service of an unlimited size, where the next queue to be visited is the one in which the first customer in line has been waiting for the longest time. The case with finite number of queues (groups) was introduced by Boxma, Van der Wal and Yechiali [3]. In this paper we extend the model to the case with a (possibly) infinite number of queues. We analyze the M/M/1, M/M/c, and M/M/1/N—type queues, as well as a priority model with (at most) M high-priority classes and a single lower priority class. In all models we present an extensive probabilistic analysis and calculate key performance measures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Arif Wicaksono

As feasible locations of public urban park in Bogor Municipality have been acquired in a previous study, decision makers are urgently needed to be informed on which locations should be prioritized for public urban park (PUP) development. Therefore, this study aggregates four multi-spatial criteria for PUP development priority modeling, namely distance to slum neighborhood, accessibility, slope, and land value. These four criteria in form of vector datasets were weighted using intuitionistic fuzzy analytical hierarchy process (IF-AHP) to consider the hesitancy, vagueness, and fuzziness might arise from experts’ judgement as well as from multi-spatial data processing. Resulted criteria weights from IF-AHP show that accessibility weight 0.261, land value weight 0.259, distance to slum weight 0.255, and slope weight 0.225, respectively. Criteria weights were inputted into fuzzy technique for order preference by similarity to the ideal solution (TOPSIS) and geographic information system (GIS) to rank location priority. Results from fuzzy TOPSIS show that very high priority class which has the biggest CCi values range (0.654-0.76) provides 0.14 km2 area of feasible PUP development scattered in 10 locations. The biggest area for feasible PUP development is generated by medium priority class (CCi values 0.439-0.546) in 26 locations and approximately area of 0.38 km2.


2010 ◽  
Vol E93-B (5) ◽  
pp. 1172-1179
Author(s):  
Masahiro HAYASHITANI ◽  
Masahiro SAKAUCHI ◽  
Kiyoshi FUKUCHI

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 852-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan H. Xu ◽  
Pitu B. Mirchandani ◽  
Srikanta P. R. Kumar ◽  
Richard R. Weber

A number of multi-priority jobs are to be processed on two heterogeneous processors. Of the jobs waiting in the buffer, jobs with the highest priority have the first option of being dispatched for processing when a processor becomes available. On each processor, the processing times of the jobs within each priority class are stochastic, but have known distributions with decreasing mean residual (remaining) processing times. Processors are heterogeneous in the sense that, for each priority class, one has a lesser average processing time than the other. It is shown that the non-preemptive scheduling strategy for each priority class to minimize its expected flowtime is of threshold type. For each class, the threshold values, which specify when the slower processor is utilized, may be readily computed. It is also shown that the social and the individual optimality coincide.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (01) ◽  
pp. 1138-1156
Author(s):  
Gballou Yao Theophile ◽  
◽  
Toure Kidjegbo Augustin ◽  
Tiecoura Yves ◽  
◽  
...  

Vehicular Delay-Tolerant Networks (VDTNs) are vehicle networks where there is no end-to-end connectivity between source and destination. As a result, VDTNs rely on cooperation between the different nodes to improve its performance. However, the presence of selfish nodes that refuse to participate in the routing protocol causes a deterioration of the overall performance of these networks. In order to reduce the impact of these selfish nodes, proposed strategies, on the one hand, use the nodes transmission rate that does not take into account the message priority class of service, and on the other hand, are based on traditional buffer management systems (FIFO, Random). As a result, quality of service is not guaranteed in this type of network where different applications are derived from messages with different priorities. In this paper, we propose a strategy for detecting selfish nodes and taking action against them in relation to priority classes in order to reduce their impacts. The operation of this strategy is based, on a partitioned memory management system taking into account the priority and the lifetime of messages, on the calculation of the transmission rate of the node with respect to the priority class of the node with the highest delivery predictability, on a mechanism for calculating the nodes degree of selfishness with respect to the priority class, and on the monitoring mechanism. . The simulations carried out show that the proposed model can detect selfish nodes and improve network performance in terms of increasing the delivery rate of high-priority messages, reducing the delivery delay of high-priority messages, and reducing network overload.


Author(s):  
Ban Bakhtyar Mahmud Shawkat ◽  
Asaad M. Jassim Al-Hindawi ◽  
Akram Hatam Shadir

<p>The cognitive radio network permits secondary users to reach unused spectrum of primary users. In this paper, a mixed preemptive/non-preemptive resume priority M/G/1 queuing model is proposed for characterizing multiple handoff delay and to minimize the extended data delivery time of secondary users that has experienced multiple spectrum handoff during its transmission. The proposed queuing model supports delay-sensitive secondary user applications. The secondary users’ traffic is classified into two priority classes, the highest priority class for delay sensitive services and the lowest priority class for delay insensitive services. Furthermore, the proposed model assigns higher priority for the interrupted secondary users over uninterrupted secondary users for each class of secondary users in order to minimize the handoff delays for secondary users that experience multiple interruptions. Analytical formulas for the average extended data delivery time are derived for two different proactive spectrum handoff strategies (always stay and always change strategies) for both classes of secondary users. Simulation of proposed system model was performed to validate the analytical results and a good agreement was obtained. The performance of the suggested model is assessed and compared with other spectrum handoff models. Numerical results illustrate that the proposed system model outperforms existing models and can reduce the extended data delivery time for the secondary users.</p>


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