Abstract

With the rapid growth of wireless compute-intensive services (such as image recognition, real-time language translation, or other artificial intelligence applications), efficient wireless algorithm design should not only address when and which users should transmit at each time instance (referred to as wireless scheduling) but also determine where the computation should be executed (referred to as offloading decision) with the goal of minimizing both computing latency and energy consumption. Despite the presence of a variety of earlier works on the efficient offloading design in wireless networks, to the best of our knowledge, there does not exist a work on the realistic user- level dynamic model, where each incoming user demands a heavy computation and leaves the system once its computing request is completed. To this end, we formulate a problem of an optimal offloading design in the presence of dynamic compute-intensive applications in wireless networks. Then, we show that there exists a fundamental logarithmic energy- workload tradeoff for any feasible offloading algorithm, and develop an optimal threshold-based offloading algorithm that achieves this fundamental logarithmic bound.

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