D
Damon Wischik
Researcher at University of Cambridge
Publications - 72
Citations - 4467
Damon Wischik is an academic researcher from University of Cambridge. The author has contributed to research in topics: Queueing theory & TCP Friendly Rate Control. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 63 publications receiving 4137 citations. Previous affiliations of Damon Wischik include University College London.
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Improving datacenter performance and robustness with multipath TCP
Costin Raiciu,Sébastien Barré,Christopher Pluntke,Adam Greenhalgh,Damon Wischik,Mark Handley +5 more
TL;DR: This work proposes using Multipath TCP as a replacement for TCP in large-scale data centers, as it can effectively and seamlessly use available bandwidth, giving improved throughput and better fairness on many topologies.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Design, implementation and evaluation of congestion control for multipath TCP
TL;DR: It is shown that some 'obvious' solutions for multipath congestion control can be harmful, but that the proposed algorithm improves throughput and fairness compared to single-path TCP.
Coupled Congestion Control for Multipath Transport Protocols
TL;DR: A congestion control algorithm which couples the congestion control algorithms running on different subflows by linking their increase functions, and dynamically controls the overall aggresiveness of the multipath flow is presented, which is a practical algorithm that is fair to TCP at bottlenecks while moving traffic away from congested links.
Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy and safety of tau-aggregation inhibitor therapy in patients with mild or moderate Alzheimer's disease: a randomised, controlled, double-blind, parallel-arm, phase 3 trial
Serge Gauthier,Howard Feldman,Lon S. Schneider,Gordon K. Wilcock,Giovanni B. Frisoni,Jiri Hardlund,Hans J Moebius,Peter Bentham,Karin A Kook,Damon Wischik,Bjoern Schelter,Charles S Davis,Roger T. Staff,Luc Bracoud,Kohkan Shamsi,John Storey,Charles R. Harrington,Claude M. Wischik +17 more
TL;DR: The primary analysis for this study was negative, and the results do not suggest benefit of LMTM as an add-on treatment for mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, but the prespecified primary analyses did not show any treatment benefit at either of the doses tested for the coprimary outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
The resource pooling principle
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the natural evolution of the Internet is that it should achieve resource pooling by harnessing the responsiveness of multipath-capable end systems.