SocioNet: A Social-Based Multimedia Access System for Unstructured P2P Networks

  • Authors:
  • Phuong Hoai Ha;Philippas Tsigas;Otto J. Anshus;fname sname

  • Affiliations:
  • Research Center for Information Technology Innovation, Taipei Taiwan;Cornell University;National Taiwan University;University of Southern California

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

Increasingly, peer-to-peer (P2P) network users expect to be able to search objects by semantic attributes based on their preferences for multimedia content. Partial match search (i.e., search through the use of multimedia content semantic information) has become an essential service in P2P systems. In this paper, we propose SocioNet, a social-based overlay that clusters peers based on their preference relationships as a small-world network. In SocioNet, peers mimic how people form a social network and how they query, by preference, their friends or acquaintances. Hence, SocioNet benefits from two desirable features of a social network: interest-based clustering and small-world properties (i.e., high cluster coefficient among all peers yet short path lengths between any two peers). To realize an interest-based small-world SocioNet, we also investigate the following practical design issues: 1) similarity estimation: we define a quantifiable similarity measure that enables clustering of similar peers in SocioNet; 2) distributed small-world overlay adaptation: peers maintain a small-world overlay under network dynamics; and 3) query strategy under the small-world overlay: we analyze appropriate settings for the Time-to-Live (TTL) value, for TTL-limited flooding, that provides a satisfactory success ratio and avoids redundant message overhead. We use simulations and a real database called AudioScrobbler [CHECK END OF SENTENCE], which tracks users' listening habits, to evaluate the performance of SocioNet. The results show that SocioNet assists peers in locating content at peers with similar interests through short path lengths, and hence, achieves a higher success ratio (than nonsmall-world interest-based overlays and noninterest-based small-world overlays) while reducing message overhead significantly.