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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Mauthe is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Mauthe.


international conference on computer communications and networks | 2012

A Trace-Driven Analysis of Caching in Content-Centric Networks

Gareth Tyson; Sebastian Kaune; Simon Miles; Yehia Elkhatib; Andreas Mauthe; Adel Taweel

A content-centric network is one which supports host-to-content routing, rather than the host-to-host routing of the existing Internet. This paper investigates the potential of caching data at the router-level in content-centric networks. To achieve this, two measurement sets are combined to gain an understanding of the potential caching benefits of deploying content-centric protocols over the current Internet topology. The first set of measurements is a study of the BitTorrent network, which provides detailed traces of content request patterns. This is then combined with CAIDAs ITDK Internet traces to replay the content requests over a real-world topology. Using this data, simulations are performed to measure how effective content-centric networking would have been if it were available to these consumers/providers. We find that larger cache sizes (10,000 packets) can create significant reductions in packet path lengths. On average, 2.02 hops are saved through caching (a 20% reduction), whilst also allowing 11% of data requests to be maintained within the requesters AS. Importantly, we also show that these benefits extend significantly beyond that of edge caching by allowing transit ASes to also reduce traffic.


Computer Communications | 2006

From content distribution networks to content networks - issues and challenges

Thomas Plagemann; Vera Goebel; Andreas Mauthe; Laurent Mathy; Thierry Turletti; Guillaume Urvoy-Keller

Due to the technical developments in electronics the amount of digital content is continuously increasing. In order to make digital content respectively multimedia content available to potentially large and geographically distributed consumer populations, Content Distribution Networks (CDNs) are used. The main task of current CDNs is the efficient delivery and increased availability of content to the consumer. This area has been subject to research for several years. Modern CDN solutions aim to additionally automate the CDN management. Furthermore, modern applications do not just perform retrieval or access operations on content, but also create content, modify content, actively place content at appropriate locations of the infrastructure, etc. If these operations are also supported by the distribution infrastructure, we call the infrastructure Content Networks (CN) instead of CDN. In order to solve the major challenges of future CNs, researchers from different communities have to collaborate, based on a common terminology. It is the aim of this paper, to contribute to such a terminology, to summarize the state-of-the-art, and to highlight and discuss some grand challenges for CNs that we have identified. Our conception of these challenges is supported by the answers to a questionnaire we received from many leading European research groups in the field.


Multimedia Tools and Applications | 2012

Framework for the integrated video quality assessment

Mu Mu; Piotr Romaniak; Andreas Mauthe; Mikołaj Leszczuk; Lucjan Janowski; Eduardo Cerqueira

Through years of development Content Networks (CN) have become more sophisticated and more technically diverse. Modern CN are designed to be more adaptive to communication environment, devices and user requirements. However, one open issue is the still fluctuating quality of service provision. As a result user experience can be negatively affected. In order to maintain a satisfactory level of user experience it is crucial to develop a feasible solution to measure the extent to which video services meet users’ expectation. Assessing video quality with respect to users’ subjective opinions is a complex task. In this paper we address challenges of this task and design an integrated framework using a number of comprehensive functional modules. Our framework integrates objective quality assessment models of Artifacts Measurement (AM) and Quality of Delivery (QoD) approaches. Only the fittest models are activated by the framework considering requirements of individual evaluation tasks. We also introduce our recent work of realising key functional modules of the framework. Joint subjective experiments between two institutes have also been carried out for the purpose of model implementation and evaluation. Results from experiments verify the concept of an integrated framework and show the effectiveness of its key modules in estimating the quality level of video services.


international conference on peer-to-peer computing | 2010

Unraveling BitTorrent's File Unavailability: Measurements and Analysis

Sebastian Kaune; Gareth Tyson; Andreas Mauthe; Carmen Guerrero; Ralf Steinmetz

BitTorrent suffers from one fundamental problem: the long-term availability of content. This occurs on a massive-scale with 38% of torrents becoming unavailable within the first month. In this paper we explore this problem by performing two large-scale measurement studies including 46K torrents and 29M users. The studies go significantly beyond any previous work by combining per-node, per-torrent and system-wide observations to ascertain the causes, characteristics and repercussions of file unavailability. The study confirms the conclusion from previous works that seeders have a significant impact on both performance and availability. However, we also present some crucial new findings: (i) the presence of seeders is not the sole factor involved in file availability, (ii) 23.5% of nodes that operate in seedless torrents can finish their downloads, and (iii) BitTorrent availability is discontinuous, operating in cycles of temporary unavailability.


distributed multimedia systems | 1996

QoS Filters: Addressing the Heterogeneity Gap

Nicholas J. Yeadon; Andreas Mauthe; David Hutchison; Francisco Garcia

Disparities in current computer technologies exist between networks, end-systems and user applications. Problems resulting from this heterogeneity gap are at their most acute in distributed multipeer environments. This paper addresses Quality of Service (QoS) disparities in heterogeneous multipeer internetworking and proposes the use of filters to bridge this aspect of the heterogeneity gap. These filter mechanisms must be sufficient adaptive to handle dynamic changes in both end-system and network capabilities. This paper discusses various filter mechanisms implemented at Lancaster University and the software developed to evaluate the feasibility of these mechanisms within a dynamic QoS controlled architecture.


Journal of Network and Systems Management | 2004

Overlay Design Mechanisms for Heterogeneous, Large-Scale, Dynamic P2P Systems

Vasilios Darlagiannis; Andreas Mauthe; Ralf Steinmetz

Large-scale, heterogeneous peer-to-peer (P2P) systems impose a set of diverse requirements. Current solutions do commonly only address a subset of these requirements since there are a number of trade-offs and constraints due to the different dimensions and aims they address. We present a novel approach for designing overlay networks for large-scale, highly dynamic, and heterogeneous P2P systems. A set of mechanisms is proposed to meet the complete set of requirements while keeping the trade-offs and constraints in balance. To handle effectively the large number of peers, they are clustered in manageable groups considering the requirements on their stability. The novelty in this approach is in the identification of the core services and operations of the aforementioned systems. On the basis of the requirements of those services and operations, peers are assigned the most suitable roles. Role relationships are further introduced to enable (and provide) incentives for the peers to adopt the most suitable roles while selecting an efficient overlay structure to preserve efficiency, robustness, and scalability. The proposed set of mechanisms is realized in Omicron, a novel hybrid P2P approach.


international conference on peer-to-peer computing | 2003

Token-based accounting and distributed pricing to introduce market mechanisms in a peer-to-peer file sharing scenario

David Hausheer; Nicolas Liebau; Andreas Mauthe; Ralf Steinmetz; Burkhard Stiller

We present a token-based accounting mechanism that alleviates the free riding problem in P2P networks. The approach is complemented by distributed pricing as a flexible and viable scheme to incite users to share valuable content and to efficiently balance requests among all peers based on economic decisions.


traffic monitoring and analysis | 2013

Quality evaluation in peer-to-peer IPTV services

Mu Mu; William Knowles; Panagiotis Georgopoulos; Steven Simpson; Eduardo Cerqueira; Nicholas J. P. Race; Andreas Mauthe; David Hutchison

Modern IPTV services are comprised of multiple comprehensive service elements in the entire content delivery chain to maximise the efficiency in networking. Audio-visual content may experience various types of impairments during content ingest, processing, distribution and reception. While some impairments do not cause noticeable distortions to the delivered content, many others such as the network transmission loss can be highly detrimental to the user experience in content consumption. In order to optimise service quality and to provide a benchmarking platform to evaluate the designs for future audio-visual content distribution system, a quality evaluation framework is essential. We introduce such an evaluation framework to assess video service with respect of user perception, while supporting service diagnosis to identify root-causes of any detected quality degradation. Compared with existing QoE frameworks, our solution offers an advanced but practical design for the real-time analysis of IPTV services in multiple service layers.


conference on multimedia computing and networking | 2009

Visibility of individual packet loss on H.264 encoded video stream: a user study on the impact of packet loss on perceived video quality

Mu Mu; Roswitha Gostner; Andreas Mauthe; Gareth Tyson; Francisco Garcia

Assessing video content transmitted over networked content infrastructures becomes a fundamental requirement for service providers. Previous research has shown that there is no direct correlation between traditional network QoS and user perceived video quality. This paper presents a study investigating the impact of individual packet loss on four types of H.264 main-profile encoded video streams. Four artifact factors to model the degree of artifacts in video frames are defined. Further, the visibility of artifacts considering the video content characteristics, encoding scheme and error concealment is investigated in conjunction with a user study. The individual and joint impacts of artifact factors are explored on the test video sequences. From the results of user tests, the artifact factor-based assessment method shows superiority over PSNR-based and network QoS based quality assessment.


next generation mobile applications, services and technologies | 2008

A Utility-Based QoS Model for Emerging Multimedia Applications

Mu Mu; Andreas Mauthe; Francisco Garcia

Existing network QoS models do not sufficiently reflect the challenges faced by high-throughput, always-on, inelastic multimedia applications. In this paper, a utility-based QoS model is proposed as a user layer extension to existing communication QoS models to better assess the requirements of multimedia applications and manage the QoS provisioning of multimedia flows. Network impairment utility functions are derived from user experiments and combined to application utility functions to evaluate the application quality. Simulation is used to demonstrate the validity of the proposed QoS model.

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Dive into the Andreas Mauthe's collaboration.

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Ralf Steinmetz

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Nicolas Liebau

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Gareth Tyson

Queen Mary University of London

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Angelos K. Marnerides

Liverpool John Moores University

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Alberto Schaeffer-Filho

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Mu Mu

University of Northampton

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Vasilios Darlagiannis

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Paul Smith

Austrian Institute of Technology

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