Spatial Distribution of the Mean Peak Age of Information in Wireless Networks
Praful D. Mankar, Mohamed A. Abd-Elmagid, Harpreet S. Dhillon

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the spatial distribution of the average peak Age of Information in large-scale wireless networks, comparing different queuing strategies and deriving bounds to optimize information freshness.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of AoI distribution in wireless networks using Poisson bipolar models and derives bounds for success probability and AoI moments.
Findings
Type II queue reduces AoI compared to Type I.
Derived bounds accurately predict AoI distribution.
System parameters significantly affect AoI performance.
Abstract
This paper considers a large-scale wireless network consisting of source-destination (SD) pairs, where the sources send time-sensitive information, termed status updates, to their corresponding destinations in a time-slotted fashion. We employ Age of information (AoI) for quantifying the freshness of the status updates measured at the destination nodes for two different queuing disciplines, namely Type I and II queues. Type I queue is assumed to transmit the status updates in a first-come-first-served (FCFS) fashion with no storage facility. However, Type I queue may not necessarily minimize AoI because a new update will not be allowed to enter a server until the current update has been successfully transmitted. To overcome this shortcoming, we consider Type II queue in which the most recent status update available at a given transmission slot is transmitted in order to minimize the…
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