Sergio D. Servetto, Eva TardosThe rate of growth of the maximum stable throughput in large-scale random networks as a function of network size is studied in this thesis. The problem is formulated as one of determining the value of the maximum multicommodity flow on the corresponding random unit-disk graph and shown to be equivalent. In this way, using simple flow techniques and probability tools, a tight bound is derived on the rate of growth of the maximum stable throughput with a fairness constraint. As an application of these techniques, similar bounds are computed for different cases of highly dense wireless networks when directional antennas are being used and the results are compared to the omnidirectional case.National Science Fou...
We address the problem of how throughput in a wireless network scales as the number of users grows. ...
Multicast transmission, in which data is sent from a source to multiple destinations, is an importan...
This dissertation investigates three problems associated with wireless networks. First, throughput ...
The rate of growth of the maximum stable throughput in large-scale random net-works as a function of...
Random access schemes are simple and inherently distributed, yet could provide the striking capabil...
The shared medium of wireless communication networks presents many technical challenges that offer a...
We propose and analyze two models of networks in which pairs of nodes communicate over a shared wire...
We consider the problem of how throughput in a wireless network with randomly located nodes scales a...
In this paper, we study how the achievable throughput scales in a wireless network with randomly loc...
We analyze a network of nodes in which pairs communicate over a shared wireless medium. We are inter...
Abstract—The problem of throughput optimization in decentralized wireless networks with spatial rand...
Abstract—The discrepancy between the upper bound on throughput scaling in wireless networks and the ...
As information networks grow in magnitude and complexity, new models and frameworks are necessary to...
International audienceIn this paper, the problem of throughput optimization in decentralized wireles...
Random access schemes are simple and inherently distributed, yet capable of matching the optimal thr...
We address the problem of how throughput in a wireless network scales as the number of users grows. ...
Multicast transmission, in which data is sent from a source to multiple destinations, is an importan...
This dissertation investigates three problems associated with wireless networks. First, throughput ...
The rate of growth of the maximum stable throughput in large-scale random net-works as a function of...
Random access schemes are simple and inherently distributed, yet could provide the striking capabil...
The shared medium of wireless communication networks presents many technical challenges that offer a...
We propose and analyze two models of networks in which pairs of nodes communicate over a shared wire...
We consider the problem of how throughput in a wireless network with randomly located nodes scales a...
In this paper, we study how the achievable throughput scales in a wireless network with randomly loc...
We analyze a network of nodes in which pairs communicate over a shared wireless medium. We are inter...
Abstract—The problem of throughput optimization in decentralized wireless networks with spatial rand...
Abstract—The discrepancy between the upper bound on throughput scaling in wireless networks and the ...
As information networks grow in magnitude and complexity, new models and frameworks are necessary to...
International audienceIn this paper, the problem of throughput optimization in decentralized wireles...
Random access schemes are simple and inherently distributed, yet capable of matching the optimal thr...
We address the problem of how throughput in a wireless network scales as the number of users grows. ...
Multicast transmission, in which data is sent from a source to multiple destinations, is an importan...
This dissertation investigates three problems associated with wireless networks. First, throughput ...