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LTE for vehicular networking: a survey

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TLDR
Standards and weaknesses of LTE as an enabling technology for vehicular communications are analyzed, and open issues and critical design choices are highlighted to serve as guidelines for future research in this hot topic.
Abstract
A wide variety of applications for road safety and traffic efficiency are intended to answer the urgent call for smarter, greener, and safer mobility. Although IEEE 802.11p is considered the de facto standard for on-the-road communications, stakeholders have recently started to investigate the usability of LTE to support vehicular applications. In this article, related work and running standardization activities are scanned and critically discussed; strengths and weaknesses of LTE as an enabling technology for vehicular communications are analyzed; and open issues and critical design choices are highlighted to serve as guidelines for future research in this hot topic.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multi-Hop Cooperative Computation Offloading for Industrial IoT–Edge–Cloud Computing Environments

TL;DR: This paper studies the multi-hop computation-offloading problem for the IIoT–edge–cloud computing model and adopts a game-theoretic approach to achieving Quality of service (QoS)-aware computation offloading in a distributed manner and develops two QoS-aware distributed algorithms that can achieve the Nash equilibrium.
Journal ArticleDOI

A tutorial survey on vehicular communication state of the art, and future research directions

TL;DR: The emerging radio access technologies such as visible light communication, mmWave, Cellular-V2X, and 5G for connected and autonomous vehicles and their associated challenges are presented.
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Soft-defined heterogeneous vehicular network: architecture and challenges

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High-Reliability and Low-Latency Wireless Communication for Internet of Things: Challenges, Fundamentals, and Enabling Technologies

TL;DR: This tutorial paper reviews the various application scenarios, fundamental performance limits, and potential technical solutions for high-reliability and low-latency (HRLL) wireless IoT networks, which all have significant impacts on latency and reliability.
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A Blockchain-SDN-Enabled Internet of Vehicles Environment for Fog Computing and 5G Networks

TL;DR: This article analyzes the combination of blockchain and SDN for the effective operation of the VANET systems in 5G and fog computing paradigms and substantially guarantees an efficient network performance, while also ensuring that there is trust among the entities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

3GPP LTE Versus IEEE 802.11p/WAVE: Which Technology is Able to Support Cooperative Vehicular Safety Applications?

TL;DR: A theoretical framework is provided which compares the basic patterns of both the technologies in the context of safety-of-life vehicular scenarios and presents mathematical models for the evaluation of the considered protocols in terms of successful beacon delivery probability.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Device-to-Device Communications; Functional Prospects for LTE-Advanced Networks

TL;DR: The paper addresses critical issues and functional blocks to enable D2D communication as an add-on functionality to the LTE SAE architecture and demonstrates that by tolerating a modest increase in interference, D1D communication with practical range becomes feasible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancing IEEE 802.11p/WAVE to provide infotainment applications in VANETs

TL;DR: The proposed W-HCF (WAVE-based Hybrid Coordination Function) protocol leverages controlled access capabilities on top of the basic contention-based access of the IEEE 802.11p; it exploits vehicles' position information and coordination among WAVE providers in order to improve performances of delay-constrained and loss-sensitive non-safety applications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A comparison of UMTS and LTE for vehicular safety communication at intersections

TL;DR: The study shows that UMTS will likely suffer from capacity limitations while LTE could perform reasonably well, and the focus is on the random access performance of the uplink channel.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

SMaRTCaR: An integrated smartphone-based platform to support traffic management applications

TL;DR: A smartphone-based platform is designed that exploits low-cost dedicated hardware to interact with sensors on board and in the vehicle surroundings that contributes to make the road transport greener, smarter, and safer.
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