Self-similar communication models and very heavy tails.
Publication:1872493
DOI10.1214/aoap/1019487509zbMath1083.60521OpenAlexW1973503202MaRDI QIDQ1872493
Holger Rootzén, Sidney I. Resnick
Publication date: 6 May 2003
Published in: The Annals of Applied Probability (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://projecteuclid.org/euclid.aoap/1019487509
regular variationself-similarityscalingtraffic modelingdata communicationPoisson connectionsPareto tailsinfinite source
Central limit and other weak theorems (60F05) Queueing theory (aspects of probability theory) (60K25) Circuits, networks (94C99) Large deviations (60F10) Computing methodologies for information systems (hypertext navigation, interfaces, decision support, etc.) (68U35) Self-similar stochastic processes (60G18) Functional limit theorems; invariance principles (60F17)
Related Items (22)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Self-similarity in high-speed packet traffic: analysis and modeling of Ethernet traffic measurements
- Macroscopic models for long-range dependent network traffic
- A simple general approach to inference about the tail of a distribution
- Weak convergence with random indices
- How system performance is affected by the interplay of averages in a fluid queue with long range dependence induced by heavy tails
- Weak convergence and empirical processes. With applications to statistics
- The qq-estimator and heavy tails
- Point processes, regular variation and weak convergence
- Subexponential asymptotics of a Markov-modulated random walk with queueing applications
- Smoothing the Hill Estimator
- Tail Index Estimation, Pareto Quantile Plots, and Regression Diagnostics
- Performance Decay in a Single Server Exponential Queueing Model with Long Range Dependence
- Asymptotic results for multiplexing subexponential on-off processes
- Semi-Stable Stochastic Processes
This page was built for publication: Self-similar communication models and very heavy tails.