Hojoong KwonSoomin KoHanbyul SeoByeong Gi Lee
In this paper, we examine what changes the next-generation wireless communication systems will experience in terms of the technologies, services, and networks and, based on that, we investigate how the inter-cell interference management should evolve in various aspects. We identify that the main driving forces of the future changes involve the data-centric services, new dynamic service scenarios, all-IP core access networks, new physical-layer technologies, and heavy upload traffic. We establish that in order to cope with the changes, the next-generation inter-cell interference management should evolve to 1) set the objective of providing a maximal data rate, 2) take the form of joint management of power allocation and user scheduling, 3) operate in a fully distributed manner, 4) handle the time-varying channel conditions in mobile environment, 5) deal with the changes in interference mechanism triggered by the new physical-layer technologies, and 6) increase the spectral efficiency while avoiding centralized coordination of resource allocation of the users in the uplink channel.
Syeda AbidiBeemkumar NagappanPrajna Paramita DebataD DeviSunny VermaA. Deepak Kumar
Yiwei YuEryk DutkiewiczXiaojing HuangMarkus Mueck
Shilpa Yogesh TisgaonkarChih‐Cheng HungBenny Bing