DocumentCode
31507
Title
A Survey on Opportunistic Scheduling in Wireless Communications
Author
Asadi, Arash ; Mancuso, Vincenzo
Author_Institution
Inst. IMDEA Networks, Madrid, Spain
Volume
15
Issue
4
fYear
2013
fDate
Fourth Quarter 2013
Firstpage
1671
Lastpage
1688
Abstract
Wireless technology advancements made opportunistic scheduling a popular topic in recent times. However, opportunistic schedulers for wireless systems have been studied since nearly twenty years, but not implemented in real systems due to their high complexity and hardly achievable requirements. In contrast, today´s popularity of opportunistic schedulers extends to implementation proposals for next generation cellular technologies. Motivated by such a novel interest towards opportunistic scheduling, we provide a taxonomy for opportunistic schedulers, which is based on scheduling design´s objectives; accordingly, we provide an extensive review of opportunistic scheduling proposals which have appeared in the literature during nearly two decades. The huge number of papers available in the literature propose different techniques to perform opportunistic scheduling, ranging from simple heuristic algorithms to complex mathematical models. Some proposals are only designed to increase the total network capacity, while others enhance QoS objectives such as throughput and fairness. Interestingly, our survey helps to unveil two major issues: (i) the research in opportunistic is mature enough to jump from pure theory to implementation, and (ii) there are still under-explored and interesting research areas in opportunistic scheduling, e.g., opportunistic offloading of cellular traffic to 802.11-like networks, or cooperative/distributed opportunistic scheduling.
Keywords
cellular radio; cooperative communication; next generation networks; quality of service; resource allocation; scheduling; telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; 802.11-like networks; QoS objective enhancement; cellular traffic; complex mathematical models; cooperative opportunistic scheduling; distributed opportunistic scheduling; heuristic algorithms; next generation cellular technologies; opportunistic offloading; resource allocation; total network capacity; wireless communications; wireless systems; wireless technology; Base stations; Optimal scheduling; Quality of service; Resource management; Scheduling; Wireless communication; Opportunistic Scheduling; Resource allocation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications Surveys & Tutorials, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1553-877X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/SURV.2013.011413.00082
Filename
6422292
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