Future telecommunications networks are expected to provide very high data rates,
seamless connections, at higher and often heterogeneous
quality-of-service levels, in scenarios with ever increasing
mobility. In order to meet these requirements, new generation
wireless networks go beyond the classical paradigms of cellular
networks and are based on complex interactions. In this scenario,
efficient allocation of the available resources and/or
cooperation, and/or competition play a strategic fundament role to
increase and optimize communication performance of individual
nodes or of the global network, and efficiently exploit the
available frequency spectrum eventually admitting unlicensed
users. This fuelled a vibrant flurry of studies in cooperative
communications, spectrum management (cognitive radio), and
resource allocation. The investigations involve researches and
technicians from the physical, to the networking layers and above
and eventually promote joint design within different layers
(cross-layer design). Analysis and design of the complex
interactions in future communications networks requires
contributions from a variety of disciplines, which span from
information theory to statistical physics, game theory,
optimization, non-commutative algebras and so forth.
The workshop promotes the applications of new
methodologies in this field with the aim of providing the
participants advanced and innovative tools able to catch the
fundamental dynamics of complex interactions. It fosters the
presentation of new cooperative protocols and new schemes for
resource allocation, novel results in the investigation of the
theoretical limits and fundamental tradeoffs between competition
and cooperation. The applications can steam from any wireless
scenario, from multicell networks to sensor and relay networks,
cognitive radio or ad hoc network. In fact, object of the workshop
is to provide the participant with a comprehensive, thorough, and
unified vision of the resource allocation issue in complex
multiuser and multiprovider networks regulated by cooperation and
competition.
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