• DocumentCode
    75145
  • Title

    Progressive or Conservative: Rationally Allocate Cooperative Work in Mobile Social Networks

  • Author

    Wei Chang ; Jie Wu

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Temple Univ., Philadelphia, PA, USA
  • Volume
    26
  • Issue
    7
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    July 1 2015
  • Firstpage
    2020
  • Lastpage
    2035
  • Abstract
    There are plenty of idle computational resources on the Internet, which could potentially be used for accomplishing huge tasks. More and more applications are being designed for exploring those idle resources. In this paper, we focus on the idle computational resources, including both human intelligence and machine computing abilities, in mobile social networks (MSNs). Based on the unique features of MSN, we design a new cooperative system, called social-crowdsourcing. The distributed and infrastructure-free features of the system make it more attractive than traditional crowdsourcing platforms. In the proposed system, a huge work is gradually partitioned into smaller pieces, and is propagated from node to node. However, how to partition and allocate these segments is a critical problem, which directly affects the work´s completion time and system throughput. Due to the lack of global information, independent relay nodes are likely to make conflicted decisions, which will cause an unbalanced workload distribution on participating nodes. In this paper, we find that, for a work at different processing stages, one should adopt distinct workload exchanging schemes, moving from a progressive method to a conservative one. Based on this observation, we propose an adaptive workload allocation scheme, in which a participating node can gradually switch his decision strategy according to the workload statuses of neighboring nodes. By using our approach, system throughput can be significantly improved, and large works can finish within a nearly optimal time. Unlike in traditional scheduling problems, we take a human´s rejection, contact delay, and social similarity into consideration. Extensive simulation results show that our proposed algorithms can successfully make full use of the idle resources in MSNs.
  • Keywords
    Internet; social networking (online); Internet; adaptive workload allocation scheme; conservative method; contact delay; distinct workload exchanging schemes; distributed features; global information; human intelligence; human rejection; idle computational resources; independent relay nodes; infrastructure-free features; machine computing; mobile social networks; progressive method; rationally allocate cooperative work; social similarity; social-crowdsourcing; unbalanced workload distribution; Crowdsourcing; Estimation; Mobile communication; Relays; Resource management; Silicon; Mobile social networks; outsourcing; potential resource; social-crowdsourcing; work partition;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1045-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPDS.2014.2330298
  • Filename
    6846357