Fully Energy-Efficient Randomized Backoff: Slow Feedback Loops Yield Fast Contention Resolution
Michael A. Bender, Jeremy T. Fineman, Seth Gilbert, John Kuszmaul, Maxwell Young

TL;DR
This paper introduces an energy-efficient contention resolution algorithm that achieves constant throughput with minimal channel access, even under adversarial noise, by employing slow feedback loops.
Contribution
It demonstrates that long feedback loops can be used to maintain high throughput and robustness without increasing energy consumption, challenging prior assumptions.
Findings
Achieves constant throughput with polylogarithmic channel accesses per packet.
Operates effectively under adversarial noise and jamming conditions.
Reduces energy consumption by using slow feedback loops.
Abstract
Contention resolution addresses the problem of coordinating access to a shared channel. Time proceeds in slots, and a packet transmission can be made in any slot. A packet is successfully sent if no other packet is also transmitted during that slot. If two or more packets are sent in the same slot, then none of these transmissions succeed. Listening during a slot gives ternary feedback, indicating if that slot had (0) silence, (1) a successful transmission, or (2+) noise. No other feedback is available. Packets are (adversarially) injected into the system over time. A packet departs the system once it is successful. The goal is to send all packets while optimizing throughput, which is roughly the fraction of successful slots. Most prior algorithms with constant throughput require a short feedback loop, in the sense that a packet's sending probability in slot t+1 is fully determined by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSecurity in Wireless Sensor Networks · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
