Title :
On the quality of wireless network connectivity
Author :
Dasgupta, S. ; Guoqiang Mao
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
Abstract :
Despite intensive research in the area of network connectivity, there is an important category of problems that remain unsolved: how to measure the quality of connectivity of a wireless multi-hop network which has a realistic number of nodes, not necessarily large enough to warrant the use of asymptotic analysis, and has unreliable connections, reflecting the inherent unreliable characteristics of wireless communications? The quality of connectivity measures how easily and reliably a packet sent by a node can reach another node. It complements the use of capacity to measure the quality of a network in saturated traffic scenarios and provides a native measure of the quality of (end-to-end) network connections. In this paper, we explore the use of probabilistic connectivity matrix as a tool to measure the quality of network connectivity. Some interesting properties of the probabilistic connectivity matrix and their connections to the quality of connectivity are demonstrated. We show that the largest eigenvalue of the probabilistic connectivity matrix can serve as a good measure of the quality of network connectivity.
Keywords :
eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; matrix algebra; probability; quality of service; radio networks; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication traffic; asymptotic analysis; connectivity measures; eigenvalue; end-to-end network connections; network quality; probabilistic connectivity matrix; saturated traffic scenarios; unreliable connections; wireless communications; wireless multihop network; wireless network connectivity quality; Connectivity; network quality; probabilistic connectivity matrix;
Conference_Titel :
Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0920-2
Electronic_ISBN :
1930-529X
DOI :
10.1109/GLOCOM.2012.6503162