On QoS-Compliant Telehaptic Communication over Shared Networks
Vineet Gokhale, Jayakrishnan Nair, Subhasis Chaudhuri, Jan Fesl

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how shared network traffic impacts telehaptic communication quality, providing conditions for ensuring QoS compliance through analytical, simulation, and real-world experiments.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis of telehaptic QoS over shared networks, including conditions for QoS compliance for CBR and adaptive protocols.
Findings
Derived sufficient conditions for QoS compliance in telehaptic streams.
Analyzed the impact of TCP and CBR cross-traffic on telehaptic QoS.
Validated conditions through extensive simulations and real network tests.
Abstract
The development of communication protocols for teleoperation with force feedback (generally known as telehaptics) has gained widespread interest over the past decade. Several protocols have been proposed for performing telehaptic interaction over shared networks. However, a comprehensive analysis of the impact of network cross-traffic on telehaptic streams, and the feasibility of Quality of Service (QoS) compliance is lacking in the literature. In this paper, we seek to fill this gap. Specifically, we explore the QoS experienced by two classes of telehaptic protocols on shared networks - Constant Bitrate (CBR) protocols and adaptive sampling based protocols, accounting for CBR as well as TCP cross-traffic. Our treatment of CBR-based telehaptic protocols is based on a micro-analysis of the interplay between TCP and CBR flows on a shared bottleneck link, which is broadly applicable for…
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