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arxiv: 2605.22325 · v1 · pith:Q45I23GKnew · submitted 2026-05-21 · 💻 cs.NI

Eliminating Premature Termination in Multihop Rendezvous for Cognitive Radio-based Emergency Response Network

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 02:20 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 💻 cs.NI
keywords cognitive radio networksmultihop rendezvouspremature terminationneighbour discoveryemergency responsetopology discoverydual-modular clock
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The pith

MR-DMCA eliminates premature termination to guarantee complete neighbor and topology discovery in cognitive radio emergency networks.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper identifies that multihop rendezvous protocols in cognitive radio networks often terminate too early using an N-1 condition, leaving some neighbors undiscovered and forming invalid topologies. This is especially problematic in post-disaster settings where reliable communication setup is critical. The authors propose MR-DMCA, which adds a coordinate-assisted validation step and an autonomous termination rule to ensure every node is found before the protocol stops. Simulations show this leads to perfect discovery accuracy and significantly shorter rendezvous times even in challenging conditions with many nodes and channels.

Core claim

Existing multihop rendezvous protocols rely on N-1 termination conditions that can cause premature termination, resulting in incomplete neighbour discovery and invalid network topology. MR-DMCA introduces a coordinate-assisted neighbour validation mechanism and an autonomous termination strategy that guarantees complete neighbour and topology discovery before protocol termination, achieving 100% accuracy and reducing rendezvous time by up to 76%, 37%, and 17% compared with baseline protocols in a worst-case scalable scenario with 20 nodes and 20 channels under high primary radio activity.

What carries the argument

The coordinate-assisted neighbour validation mechanism combined with an autonomous termination strategy, which verifies neighbors using coordinates and stops the protocol only after confirming complete discovery.

If this is right

  • Guarantees 100% accurate neighbour and topology discovery before any protocol termination.
  • Reduces rendezvous time by up to 76% compared with baseline protocols in worst-case high-activity scenarios.
  • The validation and termination approach applies to a wider class of multihop rendezvous protocols.
  • Supports more reliable network formation for cognitive radio emergency response communications.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same premature termination risk may appear in other dynamic spectrum access or ad-hoc network discovery methods.
  • Hardware experiments with actual node mobility and interference would test whether the overhead remains low outside simulations.
  • Combining the autonomous termination rule with adaptive channel sensing could further shorten discovery in varying environments.

Load-bearing premise

The coordinate-assisted neighbour validation mechanism and autonomous termination strategy will function correctly and without significant overhead in real post-disaster environments with mobility, interference, and hardware constraints.

What would settle it

A simulation run with 20 nodes and 20 channels under m=2 primary radio activity in which MR-DMCA terminates before discovering all neighbors or produces an inaccurate topology would disprove the 100% accuracy claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.22325 by Eoghan Furey, Ian McLoughlin, Saim Ghafoor, Saritha Unnikrishnan, Zahid Ali.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Dual Clock Mechanism and Timeslot Division 3.4. Neighbour Discovery In traditional multihop rendezvous protocols such as EMCA [8] and M-DMCA [7], neighbour discovery is per￾formed through a handshake-based information exchange. During this process, nodes exchange their neighbour infor￾mation to construct a neighbour list. Typically, the neigh￾bour list is composed of directly discovered neighbours, referre… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Traditional termination 4. Multihop Reliable Dual Modular Clock Algorithm (MR-DMCA) The Multihop Reliable Dual Modular Clock Algorithm (MR-DMCA) extends DMCA [6] and M-DMCA [7] to achieve reliable multihop rendezvous with validated topol￾ogy discovery. MR-DMCA combines dual modular clock hopping with coordinate-assisted neighbour verification to address limitations of traditional N-1 termination and ensure… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Controlled termination 5. Topology validation model To evaluate the correctness of neighbour discovery, the discovered network topology is compared with the actual ground topology derived from node coordinates. The val￾idation measures how accurately the rendezvous protocol reconstructs the true network connectivity. 5.1. Ground Topology Model We assume a set of N static cognitive radio nodes ran￾domly dep… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: A complete flow chart of MR-DMCA Nodes not directly connected but reachable through multi￾hop paths form the ground indirect neighbour list, defined as: 𝐼𝑁𝐿⋆ 𝑖 = { 𝑗 ∈ 𝑁 ⧵ ({𝑖} ∪ 𝐷𝑁𝐿⋆ 𝑖 ) ∶ 𝑖 ⇝𝐺𝑇 𝑗 }. (7) Z. Ali et al.: Preprint submitted to Elsevier Page 6 of 12 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: presents the ATTR performance for the baseline scenario under 0% PR activity with asymmetric channel sets (10 channels). The results show that the ATTR of MR￾DMCA is slightly higher than EMCA and M-DMCA but re￾mains lower than RCS and MCA. This behaviour occurs be￾cause conventional protocols terminate the rendezvous pro￾cess upon satisfying the N-1 condition, while MR-DMCA continues until the additional I… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 85%PR To further evaluate the effect of termination conditions, simulations were conducted under the controlled termina￾tion scenario, where all protocols employ both N-1 and IDN = 0 conditions before terminating. As shown in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p008_6.png] view at source ↗
Figure 9
Figure 9. Figure 9: ATM for Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 0%PR (a) (b) [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p009_9.png] view at source ↗
Figure 10
Figure 10. Figure 10: ATM for Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 85%PR Since the additional validation phase forces nodes to con￾tinue the discovery process until all direct neighbours are confirmed, the resulting topology becomes fully accurate for all protocols. Overall, these results highlight that while conventional protocols may achieve faster termination un￾der the baseline scenario, they may suffer from incomplete topology… view at source ↗
Figure 11
Figure 11. Figure 11: ATM for Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 0%PR (a) (b) [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p009_11.png] view at source ↗
Figure 12
Figure 12. Figure 12: ATM for Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 85%PR 6.6. Post Termination Discovery delay (PTDD) PTDD represents the additional time required to achieve complete topology discovery, calculated as the difference between ATTR under the traditional N-1 termination condi￾tion and ATTR when discovery continues until full topology Z. Ali et al.: Preprint submitted to Elsevier Page 9 of 12 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/fu… view at source ↗
Figure 13
Figure 13. Figure 13: PTDD Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 0%PR (a) (b) [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p010_13.png] view at source ↗
Figure 14
Figure 14. Figure 14: PTDD for Asym 10-CH (a) m=2 (b) m=5 with 85%PR These results highlight the trade-off between early ter￾mination and topology correctness. While conventional ap￾proaches may appear faster due to premature termination, the additional time quantified by PTDD represents the delay required to achieve complete and accurate neighbour discov￾ery. By incorporating topology validation during the ren￾dezvous process… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

In post-disaster environments, damaged communication infrastructure severely limits coordination among emergency response teams. Cognitive radio networks (CRNs) enable rapidly deployable communication by allowing nodes to opportunistically access available spectrum. However, existing multihop rendezvous protocols typically rely on N-1 termination conditions, which can lead to premature termination, resulting in incomplete neighbour discovery and invalid network topology formation. This work identifies this limitation as a previously overlooked issue in multihop rendezvous protocols. This paper proposes a Multihop Reliable Dual-Modular Clock Algorithm (MR-DMCA) that eliminates premature termination and ensures reliable network formation. The proposed protocol introduces a coordinate-assisted neighbour validation mechanism and an autonomous termination strategy that guarantees complete neighbour and topology discovery before protocol termination. Although implemented within MR-DMCA, the proposed validation and termination approach is applicable to a wider class of multihop rendezvous protocols. Extensive simulations demonstrate that, in a worst-case scalable scenario with 20 nodes and 20 channels under high primary radio activity (m=2), MR-DMCA achieves 100% accurate neighbour and topology discovery while reducing rendezvous time by up to 76%, 37%, and 17% compared with baseline protocols. The results highlight that addressing premature termination is critical for reliable multihop rendezvous in cognitive radiobased emergency communication networks.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper identifies premature termination (via N-1 conditions) as an overlooked limitation in existing multihop rendezvous protocols for cognitive radio networks in post-disaster settings, leading to incomplete neighbor discovery and invalid topology. It proposes the Multihop Reliable Dual-Modular Clock Algorithm (MR-DMCA) that adds a coordinate-assisted neighbor validation mechanism and an autonomous termination strategy to guarantee complete discovery before termination. Simulations in a worst-case scenario (20 nodes, 20 channels, m=2 high primary radio activity) report 100% accurate neighbor and topology discovery with rendezvous time reductions of up to 76%, 37%, and 17% versus baselines; the validation/termination approach is stated to apply more broadly.

Significance. If the central claims hold, the work would meaningfully advance reliable network formation for cognitive radio-based emergency response by directly tackling premature termination. The coordinate-assisted validation plus autonomous termination offers a concrete mechanism for completeness guarantees, and the reported time savings in high-activity spectrum conditions suggest practical utility for rapidly deployable post-disaster coordination. Simulation-based demonstration of perfect discovery under the stated parameters provides a clear baseline for further protocol improvements.

major comments (3)
  1. [Abstract / Proposed Protocol] Abstract and paragraph on proposed protocol: the 100% accurate neighbor and topology discovery guarantee rests on the coordinate-assisted validation mechanism correctly identifying all neighbors. The described worst-case simulation (20 nodes, 20 channels, m=2) does not incorporate mobility models, coordinate noise, or dynamic link failures; if coordinates drift or become unavailable, the validation step can produce false negatives and break the completeness claim.
  2. [Simulation Results] Simulation results: central performance claims (100% discovery and time reductions of 76%/37%/17%) are reported only for a post-hoc selected worst-case scenario with m=2; no error bars, number of runs, confidence intervals, or statistical tests are mentioned, and it is unclear whether the gains generalize beyond this specific parameter choice.
  3. [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that the validation and termination approach 'is applicable to a wider class of multihop rendezvous protocols' is presented without any integration examples, pseudocode, or analysis showing how the coordinate-assisted step would be adapted outside MR-DMCA.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Typo in abstract: 'radiobased' should be 'radio-based'.
  2. [Throughout] Ensure all simulation parameters (including exact definition of m, channel selection model, and termination condition) are explicitly defined with equations or pseudocode in the protocol and evaluation sections.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the insightful comments on our paper. We address each of the major comments point-by-point below. We believe these revisions will strengthen the manuscript and clarify the contributions regarding the elimination of premature termination in multihop rendezvous protocols.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract / Proposed Protocol] Abstract and paragraph on proposed protocol: the 100% accurate neighbor and topology discovery guarantee rests on the coordinate-assisted validation mechanism correctly identifying all neighbors. The described worst-case simulation (20 nodes, 20 channels, m=2) does not incorporate mobility models, coordinate noise, or dynamic link failures; if coordinates drift or become unavailable, the validation step can produce false negatives and break the completeness claim.

    Authors: We appreciate the referee pointing out the assumptions underlying our completeness guarantee. The MR-DMCA protocol's 100% neighbor discovery claim is based on the coordinate-assisted validation assuming accurate coordinates and no mobility during the rendezvous phase. Our simulations focused on a static worst-case scenario to isolate the effects of high primary radio activity. We agree that real-world factors like mobility and coordinate noise could lead to false negatives. In the revised version, we will add explicit statements about these assumptions in the protocol description and abstract, and include a limitations section discussing robustness to coordinate errors and plans for future work on mobility-aware extensions. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Simulation Results] Simulation results: central performance claims (100% discovery and time reductions of 76%/37%/17%) are reported only for a post-hoc selected worst-case scenario with m=2; no error bars, number of runs, confidence intervals, or statistical tests are mentioned, and it is unclear whether the gains generalize beyond this specific parameter choice.

    Authors: The referee correctly notes the absence of statistical details in the simulation results. The reported performance metrics, including the 100% discovery rate and time reductions, were obtained from multiple simulation runs, but we omitted to specify the number of trials and variability measures. We will revise the simulation results section to report the number of independent runs (100), include error bars or confidence intervals in the figures, and perform additional simulations across a range of parameters (e.g., varying m and node counts) to demonstrate that the improvements generalize beyond the specific worst-case scenario. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that the validation and termination approach 'is applicable to a wider class of multihop rendezvous protocols' is presented without any integration examples, pseudocode, or analysis showing how the coordinate-assisted step would be adapted outside MR-DMCA.

    Authors: We acknowledge that the broader applicability claim in the abstract lacks supporting details in the current manuscript. The coordinate-assisted validation and autonomous termination are intended as general mechanisms that can replace N-1 conditions in other protocols. To address this, we will include in the revised manuscript a new subsection with pseudocode illustrating the integration into a generic multihop rendezvous protocol and a short analysis of the additional overhead and benefits. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: simulation results and protocol guarantees are independent of self-defined inputs

full rationale

The paper introduces MR-DMCA as a new protocol incorporating coordinate-assisted neighbour validation and autonomous termination to prevent premature termination in multihop rendezvous. The central claims of 100% accurate discovery and specific percentage reductions in rendezvous time are presented as outcomes of extensive simulations under defined worst-case conditions (20 nodes, 20 channels, m=2). No equations, parameter fits, or self-citations are identified that reduce these performance metrics to inputs defined by the authors' own prior work or by construction within the current derivation. The protocol design provides an independent mechanism whose correctness is evaluated externally via simulation rather than tautologically assumed.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 1 axioms · 1 invented entities

Based solely on abstract; protocol rests on domain assumptions about spectrum dynamics and node behavior in post-disaster settings plus simulation parameters chosen to represent worst-case conditions.

free parameters (1)
  • primary radio activity level m=2
    Chosen to create high-interference worst-case scenario for performance claims
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Existing multihop rendezvous protocols rely on N-1 termination conditions that cause premature termination
    Stated as the core limitation identified in the work
invented entities (1)
  • MR-DMCA protocol with coordinate-assisted validation and autonomous termination no independent evidence
    purpose: To guarantee complete neighbour discovery before termination
    New algorithm introduced to address the identified limitation

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5787 in / 1411 out tokens · 43995 ms · 2026-05-22T02:20:26.723874+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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