Multi-Operator Connectivity Sharing for Reliable Networks: A Data-Driven Risk Analysis

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Abstract

A key distinction between today's and future networks is the appetite for reliable communication to support emerging critical-communication services. In this paper, we study multi-operator connectivity as a form of redundancy to support the design of reliable networks and investigate its trade-offs. This approach is motivated by 3GPP standardisation initiatives of dual-connectivity and similar techniques in industrial wired networks. We deploy a risk awareness performance metric to assess reliability: this superquantile metric accounts for periods of connectivity shortfalls. Our analysis shows that multi-operator connectivity brings significant reliability gains, in particular when network deployments by different operators exhibit high complementarity in coverage. We also explore the effects of multi-connectivity on spectral efficiency in times of high demand for bandwidth. Our study is based on a real-world dataset comprising signal strength indicators of three mobile operators in Dublin, Ireland.

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Gomes, A., Kibilda, J., Farhang, A., Farrell, R., & Dasilva, L. A. (2021). Multi-Operator Connectivity Sharing for Reliable Networks: A Data-Driven Risk Analysis. IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management, 18(3), 2800–2811. https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSM.2021.3073841

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