Mobile cloud computing offers an appealing paradigm to relieve the pressure of soaring data demands and augment energy efficiency for future green networks. Cloudlets can provide available resources to nearby mobile devices with lower access overhead and energy consumption. To stimulate service provisioning by cloudlets and improve resource utilization, a feasible and efficient incentive mechanism is required to charge mobile users and reward cloudlets. Although auction has been considered as a promising form for incentive, it is challenging to design an auction mechanism that holds certain desirable properties for the cloudlet scenario. Truthfulness and system efficiency are two crucial properties in addition to computational efficiency, individual rationality and budget balance. In this paper, we first propose a feasible and truthful incentive mechanism (TIM), to coordinate the resource auction between mobile devices as service users (buyers) and cloudlets as service providers (sellers). Further, TIM is extended to a more efficient design of auction (EDA). TIM guarantees strong truthfulness for both buyers and sellers, while EDA achieves a fairly high system efficiency but only satisfies strong truthfulness for sellers. We also show the difficulties for the buyers to manipulate the resource auction in EDA and the high expected utility with truthful bidding.
In the past decade, there has been ever-increasing research attention to user cooperation in the wireless communication networks. The unique challenges of wireless networks such as channel fading and variation can be addressed well by taking advantage of relaying among cooperating mobile terminals. There are many studies on cooperative communications at the physical layer to exploit spatial diversity for improving channel capacity. In recent years, user cooperation from the perspective of the medium access control (MAC) layer becomes a promising new research area. In this paper, we present a comprehensive survey on the mainstream cooperative MAC protocols in the literature. Focusing on the contention-based solutions, we classify the well-known proposals according to how they address two fundamental questions for user cooperation, i.e., when to cooperation and whom to cooperate with. In addition to analyzing the essential features of classic cooperative MAC protocols, we also discuss the major research challenges and project future research directions for MAC-layer cooperation.
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