Summary: | An efficient location registration scheme is essential to continuously accommodate the increasing number of mobile subscribers and to offer a variety of multimedia services with good quality. The objective of this study was to analyze the optimal size for the location area of a distance-based registration (DBR) scheme by varying the number of location areas on a cell-by-cell basis, not on a ring-by-ring basis. Using our proposed cell-by-cell distance-based registration scheme with a random walk mobility model, a variety of circumstances were analyzed to obtain the optimal number of cells for location area for minimizing the total signaling cost on radio channels. Analysis results showed that the optimal number of cells for location area was between 4 and 7 in most cases. Our cell-by-cell distance-based location registration scheme had less signaling cost than an optimal ring-by-ring distance-based location registration scheme with an optimal distance threshold of 2 (the optimal number of cells for location area was 7). Therefore, when DBR is adopted, it must be implemented with an LA increasing on a cell-by-cell basis to achieve optimal performance.
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