Abstract

This paper considers a cooperative status update system with a source aiming to send randomly generated status updates to a designated destination as timely as possible with the help of a relay. We adopt a recently proposed concept, the age of information (AoI), to characterize the timeliness of the status updates. We propose a new age-oriented opportunistic relaying (AoR) protocol to reduce the AoI of the considered system. Specifically, the relay opportunistically replaces the source to retransmit the successfully received status updates that have not been correctly delivered to the destination, but the retransmission at the relay can be preempted by the arrival of a new status update at the source. By carefully analyzing the evolution of the AoI, we derive a closed-form expression of the average AoI for the proposed AoR protocol. We further minimize the average AoI by optimizing the generation probability of the status updates at the source. Simulation results validate our theoretical analysis and demonstrate that the average AoI performance of the proposed AoR protocol is superior to that of the non-cooperative system.

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