Uncoordinated Cooperative Communications in Highly Dynamic Wireless Networks

ABSTRACT:
Cooperative communication techniques offer significant performance benefits over traditional methods that do not exploit the broadcast nature of wireless transmissions. Such techniques generally require advance coordination among the participating nodes to discover available neighbors and negotiate the cooperation strategy. However, the associated discovery and negotiation overheads may negate much of the cooperation benefit in mobile networks with highly dynamic or unstable topologies (e.g. vehicular networks). This paper discusses uncoordinated cooperation strategies, where each node overhearing a packet decides independently whether to retransmit it, without any coordination with the transmitter, intended receiver, or other neighbors in the vicinity. We formulate and solve the problem of finding the optimal uncoordinated retransmission probability at every location as a function of only a priori statistical information about the local environment, namely the node density and radio propagation model. We show that the solution consists of an optimal cooperation region which we provide a constructive method to compute explicitly. Our numerical evaluation demonstrates that uncoordinated cooperation offers a low-overhead viable alternative, especially in high-noise (or low-power) and high node density scenarios.



ARCHITECTURE:

EXISTING SYSTEM:
Due to associated coordination overheads, existing cooperative methods are suitable mostly for mesh or sensor networks with static or relatively stable topologies. They are not useful when the topology is very dynamic, due to either a high velocity (e.g. vehicular networks) or a high density of the nodes (e.g. networks of mobile devices carried by people on a busy street or conference hall). Indeed, if a network is highly dynamic, the coordination overheads are incurred too frequently to be practical even just to maintain an up-to-date view of the neighbor topology, let alone up-to-date channel state information to the neighbor nodes.

PROPOSED SYSTEM:
We consider an uncoordinated cooperative retransmission framework, where cooperative nodes overhearing a packet make retransmission decisions independently — with no prior coordination or measurement of real-time channel information to other nearby nodes, and even without being aware of their existence (apart from the transmitter and receiver of the packet). Thus, the decisions at each node (e.g. whether or not to retransmit an overheard packet, and the transmission power or modulation to use) may only be based on the location of that node, the locations of the sender and receiver, and some limited prior statistical knowledge about the local environment, namely, the spatial distribution of the nodes and radio propagation characteristics.

The concept of uncoordinated probabilistic forwarding arises in many other networking contexts, such as probabilistic flooding or gossip protocols and opportunistic forwarding in delay-tolerant networks. It frequently leads to distributed optimization of global performance objectives (e.g. delivery probability or latency) by tuning the transmission probabilities at the individual nodes.

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
HARDWARE REQUIREMENTS:

         System                 : Pentium IV 2.4 GHz.
         Hard Disk            : 40 GB.
         Floppy Drive       : 1.44 Mb.
         Monitor                : 15 VGA Colour.
         Mouse                  : Logitech.
         Ram                     : 512 Mb.

SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS:

         Operating system                     :  Windows XP.
         Coding Language           :  C#.NET

REFERENCE:
Lixiang Xiong, Lavy Libman, and Guoqiang MaoUncoordinated Cooperative Communications in Highly Dynamic Wireless Networks”, IEEE JOURNAL ON SELECTED AREAS IN COMMUNICATIONS, VOL. 30, NO. 2, FEBRUARY 2012