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On the Necessity and Design of Coordination Mechanism for Cognitive Autonomous Networks

Cognitive Autonomous Networks (CAN) are promoted to advance Self Organizing Network (SON), replacing rule-based SON Functions (SFs) with Cognitive Functions (CFs), which learn optimal behavior by interacting with the network. As in SON, CFs do encounter conflicts due to overlap in parameters or objectives. However, owing to the non-deterministic behavior of CFs, these conflicts cannot be resolved using rulebased methods and new solutions are required. This paper investigates the CF deployments with and without a coordination mechanism, and proves both heuristically and mathematically that a coordination mechanism is required. Using a two-CF Multi-Agent-System model with the possible types of conflicts, we show that the challenge is a typical bargaining problem, for which the optimal response is the Nash bargaining Solution (NBS). We use NBS to propose a coordination mechanism design that is capable of resolving the conflicts and show via simulations how implementation of the proposed solution is feasible in real life scenario.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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