Relative Age of Information: A New Metric for Status Update Systems
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In this paper, we introduce a new data freshness metric, relative Age of Information (rAoI), and examine it in a single server system with various packet management schemes. The (classical) AoI metric was introduced to measure the staleness of status updates at the receiving end with respect to their generation at the source. This metric addresses systems where the timings of update generation at the source are absolute and can be designed separately or jointly with the transmission schedules. In many decentralized applications, transmission schedules are blind to update generation timing, and the transmitter can know the timing of an update packet only after it arrives. As such, an update becomes stale after a new one arrives. The rAoI metric measures how fresh the data is at the receiver with respect to the data at the transmitter. It introduces a particularly explicit dependence on the arrival process in the evaluation of age. We investigate several queuing disciplines and provide closed form expressions for rAoI and numerical comparisons.
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Trading Off Computation with Transmission in Status Update Systems
Derives closed-form average and peak AoI for a tandem M/GI/1/1 and GI/M/1/2* queue system with dependent service times between computation and transmission.
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