EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking (Jul 2017)
A method for identifying faulty cells using a classification tree-based UE diagnosis in LTE
Abstract
Abstract The latest advances in wireless technologies have led to a proliferation of data mobile devices and services. As a consequence, mobile networks have experienced a significant increase in data traffic, while voice traffic has shown nearly no growth. It is therefore essential for operators to understand the data traffic behavior at the user level in order to ensure a good customer experience. In the radio access networks (RANs), traditional solutions based on cell-level measurements are not adequate to analyze performance of individual users. Instead, novel alternatives such as the use of call traces and the definition of new user-centric indicators will provide detailed and valuable information for each connection. One of the key measurements related to data services is the user throughput. In this work, the user throughput is adopted as the main attribute to conduct diagnosis in the RAN, which has typically been the bottleneck for data services. To that end, a binary classification tree is proposed to determine the root cause of poor throughput in user-level data sessions. Then, this information is aggregated at the cell level in order to provide effective diagnosis of degraded cells. In particular, a correlation-based analysis of the cell status is proposed in order to identify abnormal cell behaviors in an automatic way. Evaluation has been carried out with datasets from live cellular networks. Results show that the proposed diagnosis approach is an effective means to identify the main factors that limit the user throughput in network cells.
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