Paper detail

Optimizing Information Freshness in Uplink Multiuser MIMO Networks with Partial Observations

This paper investigates a multiuser scheduling problem within an uplink multiple-input multi-output (MIMO) status update network, consisting of a multi-antenna base station (BS) and multiple single-antenna devices. The presence of multiple antennas at the BS introduces spatial degrees-of-freedom, enabling concurrent transmission of status updates from multiple devices in each time slot. Our objective is to optimize network-wide information freshness, quantified by the age of information (AoI) metric, by determining how the BS can best schedule device transmissions, while taking into account the random arrival of status updates at the device side.To address this decision-making problem, we model it as a partially observable Markov decision process (POMDP) and establish that the evolution of belief states for different devices is independent.We also prove that feasible belief states can be described by finite-dimensional vectors. Building on these observations, we develop a dynamic scheduling (DS) policy to solve the POMDP, and then derive an upper bound of its AoI performance, which is used to optimize the parameter configuration. To gain more design insights, we investigate a symmetric network, and put forth a fixed scheduling (FS) policy with lower computational complexity. An action space reduction strategy is applied to further reduce the computational complexity of both DS and FS policies. Our numerical results validate our analyses and indicate that the DS policy with the reduced action space performs almost identically to the original DS policy, and both outperform the baseline policies.

preprint2024arXivOpen access
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