DocumentCode :
1519163
Title :
Modulation Rate Adaptation in Urban and Vehicular Environments: Cross-Layer Implementation and Experimental Evaluation
Author :
Camp, Joseph ; Knightly, Edward
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Southern Methodist Univ., Dallas, TX, USA
Volume :
18
Issue :
6
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
1949
Lastpage :
1962
Abstract :
Accurately selecting modulation rates for time-varying channel conditions is critical for avoiding performance degradations due to rate overselection when channel conditions degrade or underselection when channel conditions improve. In this paper, we design a custom cross-layer framework that enables: 1) implementation of multiple and previously unimplemented rate adaptation mechanisms; 2) experimental evaluation and comparison of rate adaptation protocols on controlled, repeatable channels as well as residential urban and downtown vehicular and nonmobile environments in which we accurately measure channel conditions with 100- s granularity; and 3) comparison of performance on a per-packet basis with the ideal modulation rate obtained via exhaustive experimental search. Our evaluation reveals that SNR-triggered protocols are susceptible to overselection from the ideal rate when the coherence time is low (a scenario that we show occurs in practice even in a nonmobile topology), and that “in situ” training can produce large gains to overcome this sensitivity. Another key finding is that a mechanism effective in differentiating between collision and fading losses for hidden terminals has severely imbalanced throughput sharing when competing links are even slightly heterogeneous. In general, we find trained SNR-based protocols outperform loss-based protocols in terms of the ability to track vehicular clients, accuracy within outdoor environments, and balanced sharing with heterogeneous links (even with physical layer capture).
Keywords :
fading channels; mobile radio; modulation; protocols; signal processing; telecommunication network topology; time-varying channels; SNR-based protocols; SNR-triggered protocols; balanced sharing; collision; cross-layer implementation; custom cross-layer framework; downtown vehicular nonmobile environments channel conditions; experimental evaluation; fading losses; heterogeneous links; hidden terminals; imbalanced throughput sharing; loss-based protocols; modulation rate adaptation; modulation rates; nonmobile topology; outdoor environments; performance degradations; physical layer capture; rate adaptation mechanisms; rate adaptation protocols; rate overselection; repeatable channels; residential urban vehicular nonmobile environment; time-varying channel conditions; urban environment; vehicular clients; vehicular environments; Degradation; Fading; Fluctuations; Media Access Protocol; Physical layer; Propagation losses; Scattering; Throughput; Topology; Transmitters; Cross-layer implemenation; mobility; modulation rate; rate adaptation; urban; vehicular; wireless;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1063-6692
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNET.2010.2051454
Filename :
5487432
Link To Document :
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