Title :
TASA: traffic offloading by tag-assisted social-aware opportunistic sharing in mobile social networks
Author :
Xiaofei Wang ; Xiuhua Li ; Leung, Victor C. M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Abstract :
To solve the mobile traffic explosion problem, there have been many efforts to try to offload the mobile traffic from infrastructured cellular links to direct local short-range communications among users. In this paper, we propose a novel framework of traffic offloading by Tag-Assisted Social-Aware opportunistic sharing in mobile social networks, TASA, to offload traffic by device-to-device sharing. Based on the evaluation of the tags of users and contents, we select a subset of users who are likely to receive the same content as initial seeds depending on their spreading impacts in online SNSs and their mobility patterns in offline MSNs. Then users share the content via opportunistic local connectivity (e.g., Bluetooth, Wi-Fi Direct, LTE D2D) with each other. The observation from SNS activities reveals that individual users have distinct access patterns, which allows TASA to further exploit the user-dependent access delay between the content generation time and each users access time for traffic offloading purposes. We model and analyze the traffic offloading and content spreading among users by taking into account various options in linking SNS and MSN trace data. The trace-driven evaluation demonstrates that TASA can reduce up to 78.9% of the cellular traffic.
Keywords :
mobile computing; set theory; social networking (online); telecommunication traffic; SNS activities; TASA; cellular traffic; content generation time; content spreading; device-to-device sharing; infrastructured cellular links; mobile social networks; mobile traffic explosion problem; mobility patterns; offline MSN; online SNS; opportunistic local connectivity; tag-assisted social-aware opportunistic sharing; trace-driven evaluation; traffic offloading; user-dependent access delay; Delays; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Probability; Silicon; Social network services; Videos; D2D Communication; Mobile Social Networks; Online Social Networks; Traffic Offloading;
Conference_Titel :
Local and Metropolitan Area Networks (LANMAN), 2015 IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Beijing
DOI :
10.1109/LANMAN.2015.7114741