A diversity of possible communication assumptions complicates the study of algorithms and lower bounds for radio networks. We address this problem by defining an abstract MAC layer. This service provides reliable local broadcast communication, with timing guarantees stated in terms of a collection of abstract delay functions applied to the relevant contention. Algorithm designers can analyze their algorithms in terms of these functions, independently of specific channel behavior. Concrete implementations of the abstract MAC layer over basic radio network models generate concrete definitions for these delay functions, automatically adapting bounds proven for the abstract service to bounds for the specific radio network under consideration. T...
Consider a wireless network where links may be unidirectional, that is, a computer node A can broadc...
The medium access control (MAC) is a sub-layer of the data link layer, the second layer of the open ...
© Magnús Halldórsson, Fabian Kuhn, Nancy Lynch, and Calvin Newport. In this paper we study the probl...
A diversity of possible communication assumptions complicates the study of algorithms and lower boun...
A diversity of possible communication assumptions complicates the study of algorithms and lower boun...
In much of the theoretical literature on wireless algorithms, issues of message dissemination are co...
In much of the theoretical literature on global broadcast algorithms for wireless networks, issues o...
We analyze greedy algorithms for broadcasting messages throughout a multi-hop wireless network, usin...
We study the multi-message broadcast problem using abstract MAC layer models of wireless networks. T...
We propose a wireless medium access control (MAC) protocol that provides static-priority scheduling ...
In this paper, we implement an efficient local broadcast service for the dual graph model, which des...
Because a wireless channel is a shared medium, messages sent on the wireless links might be overhear...
We propose a wireless medium access control (MAC) protocol that provides static-priority scheduling ...
Information theoretic Broadcast Channels (BC) and Multiple Access Channels (MAC) enable a single nod...
In this thesis, we study the local broadcast problem in two well-studied wireless network models. Th...
Consider a wireless network where links may be unidirectional, that is, a computer node A can broadc...
The medium access control (MAC) is a sub-layer of the data link layer, the second layer of the open ...
© Magnús Halldórsson, Fabian Kuhn, Nancy Lynch, and Calvin Newport. In this paper we study the probl...
A diversity of possible communication assumptions complicates the study of algorithms and lower boun...
A diversity of possible communication assumptions complicates the study of algorithms and lower boun...
In much of the theoretical literature on wireless algorithms, issues of message dissemination are co...
In much of the theoretical literature on global broadcast algorithms for wireless networks, issues o...
We analyze greedy algorithms for broadcasting messages throughout a multi-hop wireless network, usin...
We study the multi-message broadcast problem using abstract MAC layer models of wireless networks. T...
We propose a wireless medium access control (MAC) protocol that provides static-priority scheduling ...
In this paper, we implement an efficient local broadcast service for the dual graph model, which des...
Because a wireless channel is a shared medium, messages sent on the wireless links might be overhear...
We propose a wireless medium access control (MAC) protocol that provides static-priority scheduling ...
Information theoretic Broadcast Channels (BC) and Multiple Access Channels (MAC) enable a single nod...
In this thesis, we study the local broadcast problem in two well-studied wireless network models. Th...
Consider a wireless network where links may be unidirectional, that is, a computer node A can broadc...
The medium access control (MAC) is a sub-layer of the data link layer, the second layer of the open ...
© Magnús Halldórsson, Fabian Kuhn, Nancy Lynch, and Calvin Newport. In this paper we study the probl...