Prioritization-Driven Congestion Control in Networks for the Internet of Medical Things: A Cross-Layer Proposal

Sensors (Basel). 2023 Jan 13;23(2):923. doi: 10.3390/s23020923.

Abstract

Real-life implementation of the Internet of Things (IoT) in healthcare requires sufficient quality of service (QoS) to transmit the collected data successfully. However, unsolved challenges in prioritization and congestion issues limit the functionality of IoT networks by increasing the likelihood of packet loss, latency, and high-power consumption in healthcare systems. This study proposes a priority-based cross-layer congestion control protocol called QCCP, which is managed by communication devices' transport and medium access control (MAC) layers. Unlike existing methods, the novelty of QCCP is how it estimates and resolves wireless channel congestion because it does not generate control packets, operates in a distributed manner, and only has a one-bit overhead. Furthermore, at the same time, QCCP offers packet scheduling considering each packet's network load and QoS. The results of the experiments demonstrated that with a 95% confidence level, QCCP achieves sufficient performance to support the QoS requirements for the transmission of health signals. Finally, the comparison study shows that QCCP outperforms other TCP protocols, with 64.31% higher throughput, 18.66% less packet loss, and 47.87% less latency.

Keywords: congestion control; cross-layer; healthcare; internet of medical things; packet scheduling.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Communication
  • Computer Communication Networks*
  • Internet
  • Wireless Technology*

Grants and funding

Authors want to thanks your institutions for the facilities provided in the realization of this work: School of Telematics-Universidad de Colima and Facultad de Ingeniería, Arquitectura y Diseño-Universidad Autónoma de Baja California.