Understanding Age of Information in Large-Scale Wireless Networks
Howard H. Yang, Chao Xu, Xijun Wang, Daquan Feng, and Tony Q. S. Quek

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework to analyze Age of Information (AoI) in large-scale wireless networks, revealing how different protocols and network densities impact AoI performance.
Contribution
It provides tractable expressions for AoI metrics under FCFS and LCFS-PR protocols in large networks, enhancing understanding of protocol and density effects on AoI.
Findings
LCFS-PR achieves lower AoI than FCFS, especially in dense networks.
A universal ALOHA channel access probability is ineffective in sparse networks.
Optimal ALOHA probability exists in dense networks to minimize AoI.
Abstract
The notion of age-of-information (AoI) is investigated in the context of large-scale wireless networks, in which transmitters need to send a sequence of information packets, which are generated as independent Bernoulli processes, to their intended receivers over a shared spectrum. Due to interference, the rate of packet depletion at any given node is entangled with both the spatial configurations, which determine the path loss, and temporal dynamics, which influence the active states, of the other transmitters, resulting in the queues to interact with each other in both space and time over the entire network. To that end, variants in the packet update frequency affect not just the inter-arrival time but also the departure process, and the impact of such phenomena on the AoI is not well understood. In this paper, we establish a theoretical framework to characterize the AoI performance in…
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