1. The problem/issue addressed
The problem addressed in the project is to develop a communication and computation infrastructure that is able to support the processing of a vast amount of data generated/collected by Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices/users. For communication, we addressed the problem of massive random access where a large number of devices send information to a common server in a sporadic and time-varying manner. For computation, we considered edge computing where the processing tasks, such as machine learning, is performed in edge servers deployed close to the users.
2. The importance for society
This problem is important because to the realization of the IoT requires such a communication and computation infrastructure. The IoT is a key enabler for a variety of applications such as immersive communications, autonomous driving, smart cities, and smart factories.
3. The overall objectives
The main goal of this project is to investigate how low-latency and privacy-preserving edge computing protocols can be developed in wireless random-access networks. To achieve this main goal, we specified two specific goals (SGs):
• SG1: Establish a foundation for privacy and reliability in latency-critical edge computing in random-access networks.
• SG2: Devise resilient coding schemes to achieve low latency and preserve privacy in distributed edge computing.
SG1 aims at understanding the fundamental limits, while SG2 aims at designing practical schemes for low-latency and private edge computing in random-access networks.