Learning optimal routing for the uplink in LPWANs using similarity-enhanced e-greedy
Published in IEEE 28th Annual International Symposium on Personal, Indoor, and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC), 2017
Recommended citation: Barrachina-Muñoz, S., & Bellalta, B. (2017, October). Learning optimal routing for the uplink in LPWANs using similarity-enhanced e-greedy. In 2017 IEEE 28th Annual International Symposium on Personal, Indoor, and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC) (pp. 1-5). IEEE. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/8292373/
Abstract: Despite being a relatively new communication technology, Low-Power Wide Area Networks (LPWANs) have shown their suitability to empower a major part of Internet of Things applications. Nonetheless, most LPWAN solutions are built on star topology (or single-hop) networks, often causing lifetime shortening in stations located far from the gateway. In this respect, recent studies show that multi-hop routing for uplink communications can reduce LPWANs’ energy consumption significantly. However, it is a troublesome task to identify such energetically optimal routing through trial-and-error brute-force approaches because of time and, especially, energy consumption constraints. In this work we show the benefits of facing this exploration/exploitation problem by running centralized variations of the multi-arm bandit’s e-greedy, a well-known online decision-making method that combines best known action selection and knowledge expansion. Important energy savings are achieved when proper randomness parameters are set, which are often improved when conveniently applying similarity, a concept introduced in this work that allows harnessing the gathered knowledge by sporadically selecting unexplored routing combinations akin to the best known one.