Research Article
Throughput and QoS Pricing in Wireless Communication
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.valuetools.2011.245699, author={Andrey Garnaev and Hayel Yezekael and Konstantin Avrachenkov and Eitan Altman}, title={Throughput and QoS Pricing in Wireless Communication}, proceedings={5th International ICST Conference on Performance Evaluation Methodologies and Tools}, publisher={ICST}, proceedings_a={VALUETOOLS}, year={2012}, month={6}, keywords={Stackelberg game QoS Price per rate Throughput}, doi={10.4108/icst.valuetools.2011.245699} }
- Andrey Garnaev
Hayel Yezekael
Konstantin Avrachenkov
Eitan Altman
Year: 2012
Throughput and QoS Pricing in Wireless Communication
VALUETOOLS
ICST
DOI: 10.4108/icst.valuetools.2011.245699
Abstract
In this paper we investigate a bi-level economic model of wireless communications taking into account the user's demand and the QoS offered by the network. To deal with it a Stackelberg game approach is suggested where the provider decides the price per rate. In fact, users have to pay for the throughput they have contracted with the service provider in their SLA. Then, pricing for throughput is more realistic then pricing for power as it is suggested in several papers in the literature. Our approach is general as we have important results for general user's utility function with only natural assumptions on them. We also study next an incomplete information case in which the provider has no perfect information about the user demands in network and its quality. To deal with it a Bayesian approach is applied. It demonstrates that the expectation on the increasing user demand can induce jumping reduction of the optimal tariff meanwhile impairs expectation about increasing in user activity can lead to jumping increasing in the optimal tariff. This jumping nature of tariff tells about importance of marketing research for provider to correctly estimate user's demand in his intention of using network and how he personally values the service. The multiuser case is investigated and a closed form expression of the Stackelberg equilibrium is obtained. It is shown that the provider cannot essentially increase its profit by simple increasing number of users.