Adaptive Video Streaming for Wireless Networks with Multiple Users and Helpers
Dilip Bethanabhotla, Giuseppe Caire, Michael J. Neely

TL;DR
This paper develops an optimal, adaptive video streaming policy for wireless networks with multiple users and helpers, balancing load, interference, and user-helper association to maximize quality and minimize delays.
Contribution
It introduces a Lyapunov-based optimization framework for joint helper selection, video quality adaptation, and scheduling, achieving provably optimal performance in dynamic wireless environments.
Findings
The proposed scheme is provably optimal in a strong per-sample path sense.
Simulation results show improved video quality and delay management in dense helper deployments.
The method effectively adapts to user mobility and non-stationary network conditions.
Abstract
We consider the optimal design of a scheduling policy for adaptive video streaming in a wireless network formed by several users and helpers. A feature of such networks is that any user is typically in the range of multiple helpers. Hence, in order to cope with user-helper association, load balancing and inter-cell interference, an efficient streaming policy should allow the users to dynamically select the helper node to download from, and determine adaptively the video quality level of the download. In order to obtain a tractable formulation, we follow a "divide and conquer" approach: i) Assuming that each video packet (chunk) is delivered within its playback delay ("smooth streaming regime"), the problem is formulated as a network utility maximization (NUM), subject to queue stability, where the network utility function is a concave and componentwise non-decreasing function of the…
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