DocumentCode :
1559172
Title :
On credibility of simulation studies of telecommunication networks
Author :
Pawlikowski, K. ; Jeong, H.-D.J. ; Lee, J.-S.R.
Author_Institution :
Canterbury Univ., Christchurch, New Zealand
Volume :
40
Issue :
1
fYear :
2002
Firstpage :
132
Lastpage :
139
Abstract :
In telecommunication networks, as in many other areas of science and engineering, the proliferation of computers as research tools has resulted in the adoption of computer simulation as the most commonly used paradigm of scientific investigations. This, together with a plethora of existing simulation languages and packages, has created a popular opinion that simulation is mainly an exercise in computer programming. In new computing environments, programming can be minimized, or even fully replaced, by the manipulation of icons (representing prebuilt programming objects containing basic functional blocks of simulated systems) on a computer monitor. One can say that we have witnessed another success of modern science and technology: the emergence of wonderful and powerful tools for exploring and predicting the behavior of such complex stochastic dynamic systems as telecommunication networks. But this enthusiasm is not shared by all researchers in this area. An opinion is spreading that one cannot rely on the majority of the published results on performance evaluation studies of telecommunication networks based on stochastic simulation, since they lack credibility. Indeed, the spread of this phenomenon is so wide that one can speak about a deep crisis of credibility. In this article this claim is supported by the results of a survey of over 2200 publications on telecommunication networks in proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM and such journals as IEEE Transactions on Communications, IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, and Performance Evaluation Journal. The discussion focuses on two important necessary conditions of a credible simulation study: use of appropriate pseudo-random generators of independent uniformly distributed numbers, and appropriate analysis of simulation output data. Having considered their perils and pitfalls, we formulate guidelines that, if observed, could help to ensure a basic level of credibility of simulation studies of telecommunication networks.
Keywords :
discrete event simulation; random number generation; stochastic systems; telecommunication computing; telecommunication networks; computer programming; computer simulation; computing environments; credibility; functional blocks; independent uniformly distributed numbers; performance evaluation; performance evaluation studies; programming objects; pseudo-random generators; research tools; simulated systems; simulation languages; simulation output data; simulation packages; simulation studies; stochastic discrete-event simulation; stochastic dynamic systems; telecommunication networks; uniformly distributed numbers; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Computer displays; Computer networks; Computer simulation; Functional programming; Packaging; Stochastic processes; Stochastic systems; Telecommunication computing;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0163-6804
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/35.978060
Filename :
978060
Link To Document :
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