Fair sharing of bandwidth remains an unresolved issue for distributed systems. In this paper, the users of a distributed LAN are modeled as selfish users with independence to choose their individual strategies. With these selfish users, the contention-based distributed medium access scenario is modeled as a complete-information, noncooperative game, designated the Access Game. A novel MAC strategy based on p-persistent CSMA is presented to achieve fairness in the Access Game. It is proven that there are an infinite number of Nash Equilibria for the Access Game, but they do not result in fairness. Therefore, it may be beneficial for the selfish users to adhere to a set of constraints that result in fairness in a noncooperative fashion....
In this paper, we generalize the random access game model, and show that it provides a general game-...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...
Fair sharing of bandwidth remains an unresolved issue for distributed systems. In this paper, the us...
Fair sharing of bandwidth in distributed systems is considered. The inherently contention-based medi...
Fair sharing of bandwidth in distributed systems is considered. The inherently contention-based medi...
In this chapter we consider the effect of selfishness on distributed MAC protocols in wireless loc...
In this chapter we consider the effect of selfishness on distributed MAC protocols in wireless loc...
This paper examines the theoretical aspects of bandwidth sharing in wireless, possibly mobile, ad-ho...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider medium access control of local area networks (LANs)...
Motivated partially by a control-theoretic viewpoint, we propose a game-theoretic model, called rand...
Motivated partially by a control-theoretic viewpoint, we propose a game-theoretic model, called rand...
We present a game-theoretic approach to contention control. We define a game-theoretic model, called...
In this paper, we generalize the random access game model, and show that it provides a general game-...
Abstract—In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for access-ing a shared channel by means of a random...
In this paper, we generalize the random access game model, and show that it provides a general game-...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...
Fair sharing of bandwidth remains an unresolved issue for distributed systems. In this paper, the us...
Fair sharing of bandwidth in distributed systems is considered. The inherently contention-based medi...
Fair sharing of bandwidth in distributed systems is considered. The inherently contention-based medi...
In this chapter we consider the effect of selfishness on distributed MAC protocols in wireless loc...
In this chapter we consider the effect of selfishness on distributed MAC protocols in wireless loc...
This paper examines the theoretical aspects of bandwidth sharing in wireless, possibly mobile, ad-ho...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider medium access control of local area networks (LANs)...
Motivated partially by a control-theoretic viewpoint, we propose a game-theoretic model, called rand...
Motivated partially by a control-theoretic viewpoint, we propose a game-theoretic model, called rand...
We present a game-theoretic approach to contention control. We define a game-theoretic model, called...
In this paper, we generalize the random access game model, and show that it provides a general game-...
Abstract—In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for access-ing a shared channel by means of a random...
In this paper, we generalize the random access game model, and show that it provides a general game-...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...
In WiFi networks, mobile nodes compete for accessing a shared channel by means of a random access pr...