Title :
Adaptive call admission control mechanism for DS-CDMA cellular system
Author :
Sung, Yi-Kuen ; Hwang, Ren-Hung ; Chen, Min-Xiou ; Hsu, Jenq-Muh
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Chung Cheng Univ., Chia-Yi, Taiwan
fDate :
31 May-2 June 2004
Abstract :
In the DS-CDMA (direct-sequence code-division multiple-access) cellular system, a call admission control (CAC) mechanism is needed to determine whether a new arrival user shall be accepted while the transmission quality of existing users can be guaranteed Furthermore, a handoff call shall have a higher priority than a new arriving call. Most of existing CAC mechanisms in the literature reserve a certain number of channels for handoff calls statistically. In this paper, the number of reserved channel should be adaptive to arrival rates of new calls and handoff calls, moving speed of user, call holding time, as well as the system capacity is shown. Therefore, in this paper, a CAC mechanism with adaptive channel reservation for handoff calls based on the Markov decision processes (MDP) is proposed. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme achieves better grade of service (GOS) of the system under various configurations.
Keywords :
Markov processes; cellular radio; code division multiple access; spread spectrum communication; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network management; telecommunication traffic; CAC mechanism; DS-CDMA; GOS; MDP; Markov decision process; adaptive channel reservation; call admission control; cellular system; direct-sequence code-division multiple-access; grade of service; handoff calls; Adaptive control; Bit error rate; Call admission control; Computer science; Interference; Multiaccess communication; Programmable control; Proposals; Resource management; Signal processing;
Conference_Titel :
Emerging Technologies: Frontiers of Mobile and Wireless Communication, 2004. Proceedings of the IEEE 6th Circuits and Systems Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7938-1
DOI :
10.1109/CASSET.2004.1321947