Modern Random Access: an Age of Information Perspective on Irregular Repetition Slotted ALOHA

07/20/2020
by   Andrea Munari, et al.
0

Recent years have witnessed a steadily growing interest towards modern random access protocols for massive machine type communications in next generation wireless systems. Constructively embracing interference, these solutions have been shown to attain a spectral efficiency comparable to that of coordinated access schemes, while remaining true to the grant-free paradigm. On the other hand, their ability to maintain a fresh and up-to-date view at the receiver when devices transmit status updates, as typical in IoT applications, is still largely unexplored. In this paper we start to bridge such a gap, focusing on a scenario in which a large population of devices share a common wireless channel in an uncoordinated fashion, and studying the age of information (AoI) metric when medium access follows the irregular repetition slotted ALOHA (IRSA) protocol. By means of a Markovian analysis, we track the AoI evolution for a source at the receiver, prove that the process is ergodic, and derive a compact closed form expression for its stationary distribution. Leaning on this, we compute exact formulations for the average AoI and for the peak-age violation probability. The study reveals non-trivial design trade-offs for IRSA, highlighting the key role played by the protocol operating frame size. Moreover, a comparison with the performance of a simpler slotted ALOHA strategy highlights a remarkable potential for modern random access in terms of information freshness.

READ FULL TEXT

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset

Sign in with Google

×

Use your Google Account to sign in to DeepAI

×

Consider DeepAI Pro