Abstract

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are becoming more common in wireless communication networks. Using UAVs can lead to network problems. An issue arises when the UAVs function in a network-access-limited environment with nodes causing interference. This issue could potentially hinder UAV network connectivity. This paper introduces an intelligent packet priority module (IPPM) to minimize network latency. This study analyzed Network Simulator–3 (NS-3) network modules utilizing Manhattan long short-term memory (MaLSTM) for packet classification of critical UAV, ground control station (GCS), or interfering nodes. To minimize network latency and packet delivery ratio (PDR) issues caused by interfering nodes, packets from prioritized nodes are transmitted first. Simulation results and evaluation show that our proposed intelligent packet priority module (IPPM) method outperformed previous approaches. The proposed IPPM based on MaLSTM implementation for the priority packet module led to a lower network delay and a higher packet delivery ratio. The performance of the IPPM averaged 62.2 ms network delay and 0.97 packet delivery ratio (PDR). The MaLSTM peaked at 97.5% accuracy. Upon further evaluation, the stability of LSTM Siamese models was observed to be consistent across diverse similarity functions, including cosine and Euclidean distances.

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