This SpringerBrief presents research in the application of Stochastic
Petri Nets (SPN) to the performance evaluation of wireless networks
under bursty traffic. It covers typical Quality-of-Service performance
metrics such as mean throughput, average delay and packet dropping
probability. Along with an introduction of SPN basics, the authors
introduce the key motivation and challenges of using SPN to analyze the
resource sharing performance in wireless networks. The authors explain
two powerful modeling techniques that treat the well-known state space
explosion problem: model decomposition and iteration, and model
aggregation using stochastic high-level petri nets. The first technique
assists in performance analysis of opportunistic scheduling,
Device-to-Device communications with full frequency reuse and partial
frequency reuse. The second technique is used to formulate a wireless
channel mode for cross-layer performance analysis in OFDM system.
Stochastic Petri Nets for Wireless Networks reveals useful insights for
the design of radio resource management algorithms and a new line of
thinking for the performance evaluation of future wireless networks.
This material is valuable as a reference for researchers and
professionals working in wireless networks and for advanced-level
students studying wireless technologies in electrical engineering or
computer science.