Informationally Decentralized Video Streaming Over Multihop Wireless Networks

  • Authors:
  • Hsien-Po Shiang;M. van der Schaar

  • Affiliations:
  • Univ. of California, Los Angeles;-

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
  • Year:
  • 2007

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Abstract

Various packet scheduling, dynamic routing, error-protection, and channel adaptation strategies have been proposed at different layers of the protocol stack to address multi-user video streaming over multihop wireless networks. However, these cross-layer transmission strategies can be efficiently optimized only if they use accurate information about the network conditions and hence, are able to timely adapt to network changes. Due to the informationally decentralized nature of the multihop wireless network, performing centralized optimization for delay-sensitive video streaming application based on global information about the network status is not practical. Distributed solutions that adapt the transmission strategies based on timely information feedback need to be considered. To acquire this information feedback for cross-layer adaptation, we deploy an overlay infrastructure, which is able to relay the necessary information about the network status and incurred delays across different network ldquohorizonsrdquo (i.e., across a different number of hops in a predetermined period of time). In this paper, we propose a distributed streaming approach that is optimized based on the local information feedback acquired from the various network horizons. We investigate the distributed cross-layer adaptation at each wireless node by considering the advantages resulting from an accurate and frequent network information feedback from larger horizons as well as the drawbacks resulting from an increased transmission overhead. Based on the information feedback, we can estimate the risk that packets from different priority classes will not arrive at their destination before their decoding deadline expires. Subsequently, the various transmission strategies such as packet scheduling, retransmission limit and dynamic routing policies are adapted to jointly consider the estimated risk as well as the impact in terms of distortion of the different priority classes. Our results show that- - the proposed dynamic routing policy based on timely information feedback outperforms existing state-of-the-art on-demand routing solutions by more than 2 dB in terms of the received video quality.