On the Cost of Consecutive Estimation Error: Significance-Aware Non-linear Aging
Jiping Luo, Nikolaos Pappas

TL;DR
This paper introduces a significance-aware metric for remote state estimation that optimizes transmission timing by considering the importance of errors, leading to fewer transmissions and improved performance.
Contribution
It proposes the significance-aware Age of Consecutive Error metric and characterizes the optimal transmission policy as a switching or threshold policy with reduced computational complexity.
Findings
Optimal policy outperforms classic policies in simulations.
Structured policy iteration reduces computation overhead.
Utilizing more semantic attributes decreases transmission frequency.
Abstract
This paper considers the semantics-aware remote state estimation of an asymmetric Markov chain with prioritized states. Due to resource constraints, the sensor needs to trade between estimation quality and communication cost. The aim is to exploit the significance of information through the history of system realizations to determine the optimal timing of transmission, thereby reducing the amount of uninformative data transmitted in the network. To this end, we introduce a new metric, the significance-aware Age of Consecutive Error (AoCE), that captures two semantic attributes: the significance of estimation error and the cost of consecutive error. Different costs and non-linear age functions are assigned to different estimation errors to account for their relative importance to system performance. We identify the optimal transmission problem as a countably infinite state Markov…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProbabilistic and Robust Engineering Design
