Relay Selection for Wireless Communications Against Eavesdropping: A Security-Reliability Tradeoff Perspective
Yulong Zou, Jia Zhu, Xuelong Li, and Lajos Hanzo

TL;DR
This paper investigates relay selection strategies to enhance security and reliability in wireless communications against eavesdropping, demonstrating that relay-assisted schemes improve the security-reliability tradeoff compared to direct transmission.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes single-relay and multi-relay selection schemes, quantifying their benefits in improving security-reliability tradeoff in wireless systems.
Findings
Relay schemes outperform direct transmission in SRT.
Multi-relay selection outperforms single-relay selection.
Increasing relays improves security and reliability.
Abstract
This article examines the secrecy coding aided wireless communications from a source to a destination in the presence of an eavesdropper from a security-reliability tradeoff (SRT) perspective. Explicitly, the security is quantified in terms of the intercept probability experienced at the eavesdropper, while the outage probability encountered at the destination is used to measure the transmission reliability. We characterize the SRT of conventional direct transmission from the source to the destination and show that if the outage probability is increased, the intercept probability decreases, and vice versa. We first demonstrate that the employment of relay nodes for assisting the source-destination transmissions is capable of defending against eavesdropping, followed by quantifying the benefits of single-relay selection (SRS) as well as of multi-relay selection (MRS) schemes. More…
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