AI-Enhanced Distributed Channel Access for Collision Avoidance in Future Wi-Fi 8
By: Jinzhe Pan , Jingqing Wang , Yuehui Ouyang and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes Wi-Fi faster and fairer for everyone.
The exponential growth of wireless devices and stringent reliability requirements of emerging applications demand fundamental improvements in distributed channel access mechanisms for unlicensed bands. Current Wi-Fi systems, which rely on binary exponential backoff (BEB), suffer from suboptimal collision resolution in dense deployments and persistent fairness challenges due to inherent randomness. This paper introduces a multi-agent reinforcement learning framework that integrates artificial intelligence (AI) optimization with legacy device coexistence. We first develop a dynamic backoff selection mechanism that adapts to real-time channel conditions through access deferral events while maintaining full compatibility with conventional CSMA/CA operations. Second, we introduce a fairness quantification metric aligned with enhanced distributed channel access (EDCA) principles to ensure equitable medium access opportunities. Finally, we propose a centralized training decentralized execution (CTDE) architecture incorporating neighborhood activity patterns as observational inputs, optimized via constrained multi-agent proximal policy optimization (MAPPO) to jointly minimize collisions and guarantee fairness. Experimental results demonstrate that our solution significantly reduces collision probability compared to conventional BEB while preserving backward compatibility with commercial Wi-Fi devices. The proposed fairness metric effectively eliminates starvation risks in heterogeneous scenarios.
Similar Papers
Learning-Based Channel Access in Wi-Fi: A Multi-Armed Bandit Approach
Networking and Internet Architecture
Makes Wi-Fi faster by learning how to share.
Deep Reinforcement Learning-Based Scheduling for Wi-Fi Multi-Access Point Coordination
Networking and Internet Architecture
Makes Wi-Fi faster and less laggy.
Coordinated Spatial Reuse Scheduling With Machine Learning in IEEE 802.11 MAPC Networks
Networking and Internet Architecture
Makes Wi-Fi faster by letting devices share channels.