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  1. Lutu, Andra; Zhang, Ying (Ed.)
    Design for low latency networking is essential for tomorrow’s interactive applications, but it is essential to deploy incrementally and universally at the network’s last mile. While wired broadband ISPs are rolling out the leading queue occupancy signaling mechanisms, the cellular Radio Access Network (RAN), another important last mile to many users, lags behind these efforts. This paper proposes a new RAN design, L4Span, that abstracts the complexities of RAN queueing in a simple interface, thus tying the queue state of the RAN to end-to-end low-latency signaling all the way back to the content server. At millisecond-level timescales, L4Span predicts the RAN’s queuing occupancy and performs ECN marking for both low-latency and classic flows. L4Span is lightweight, requiring minimal RAN modifications, and remains 3GPP and O-RAN compliant for maximum ease of deployment. We implement a prototype on the srsRAN open-source software in C++. Our evaluation compares the performance of low-latency as well as classic flows with or without the deployment of L4Span in various wireless channel conditions. Results show that L4Span reduces the one-way delay of both low-latency and classic flows by up to 98%, while simultaneously maintaining near line-rate throughput. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
  2. 5G wireless networks leverage complex scheduling, retransmission, and adaptation mechanisms to maximize their efficiency. These mechanisms interact to produce significant fluctuations in uplink and downlink capacity and latency, markedly impacting the the performance of real-time communication and multimedia applications, such as video conferencing. These applications are particularly sensitive to such fluctuations, resulting in lag, stuttering, distorted audio, and low video quality. In this paper, we present a cross-layer view of 5G networks and their impact on and interaction with video-conferencing applications. We conduct novel, detailed measurements of both private CBRS and commercial carrier cellular network dynamics, capturing physical- and link-layer events and correlating them with their effects at the network and transport layers, and the video-conferencing application itself. Our two datasets comprise days of low-rate campus-wide Zoom telemetry data, and hours of high-rate, correlated WebRTC-network-5G telemetry data. Based on these data, we trace performance anomalies back to root causes, identifying 24 previously unknown causal event chains that degrade 5G video conferencing. Armed with this knowledge, we build Domino, a tool that automates this process and is user-extensible to future wireless networks and interactive applications. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 28, 2026
  3. Dataset release for the paper "Automated, Cross-Layer Root Cause Analysis of 5G Video-Conferencing Quality Degradation"; published in the proceedings of ACM IMC 2025. 
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  4. Release for IMC (v0.1). This repository provides the experimental setup and automation scripts used for measuring WebRTC performance over 5G networks. It reproduces the setup used in our paper, where: One WebRTC client runs on a Google Cloud VM, and the other client runs on a local machine connected via T-Mobile 5G. The setup includes video streaming via virtual cameras, synchronized system clocks, and data collection through tcpdump and custom packet parsers. 
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  5. L4Span is a prototype implementation for Low-Latency Low-Loss and Scalable (L4S) congestion signal architecture in the 5G network to achieve ultra-low sojourn time in the RLC buffer while maintaining a good capacity usage. L4Span is located above the SDAP layer to perform the ECN marking for 1) uplink ACK packet to short-circuit the RAN if possible (for TCP traffic) or 2) downlink packet to enable generic L4S marking mechanism (for UDP or QUIC traffic). 
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  6. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 12, 2026
  7. NextG cellular networks are designed to meet Quality of Service requirements for various applications in and beyond smartphones and mobile devices. However, lacking introspection into the 5G Radio Access Network (RAN) application and transport layer designers are ill-poised to cope with the vagaries of the wireless last hop to a mobile client, while 5G network operators run mostly closed networks, limiting their potential for co-design with the wider internet and user applications. This paper presents NR-Scope, a passive, incrementally-deployable, and independently-deployable Standalone 5G network telemetry system that can stream fine-grained RAN capacity, latency, and retransmission information to application servers to enable better millisecond scale, application-level decisions on offered load and bit rate adaptation than end-to-end latency measurements or end-to-end packet losses currently permit. Our experimental evaluation on various 5G Standalone base stations demonstrates NR-Scope can achieve less than 0.1% throughput error estimation for every UE in a RAN. The code is available at https://github.com/PrincetonUniversity/NR-Scope. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 9, 2025
  8. 5G New Radio cellular networks are designed to provide high Quality of Service for application on wirelessly connected devices. However, changing conditions of the wireless last hop can degrade application performance, and the applications have no visibility into the 5G Radio Access Network (RAN). Most 5G network operators run closed networks, limiting the potential for co-design with the wider-area internet and user applications. This paper demonstrates NR-Scope, a passive, incrementally-deployable, and independently-deployable Standalone 5G network telemetry system that can passively measure fine-grained RAN capacity, latency, and retransmission information. Application servers can take advantage of the measurements to achieve better millisecond scale, application-level decisions on offered load and bit rate adaptation than end-to-end latency measurements or end-to-end packet losses currently permit. We demonstrate the performance of NR-Scope by decoding the downlink control information (DCI) for downlink and uplink traffic of a 5G Standalone base station in real-time. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 4, 2025
  9. We present the design and implementation of WaveFlex, the first smart surface that enhances Private 5G networks operating under the shared-license framework in the Citizens Broadband Radio Service frequency band. WaveFlex works in the presence of frequency diversity: multiple nearby base stations operating on different frequencies, as dictated by a Spectrum Access System coordinator. It also handles time dynamism: due to the dynamic sharing rules of the CBRS band, base stations occasionally switch channels, especially when priority users enter the network. Finally, WaveFlex operates independently of the network itself, not requiring access to nor modification of the gNB or UEs, yet it remains compliant with and effective on prevailing cellular protocols. We have designed and fabricated WaveFlex on a custom multi-layer PCB, software defined radio based network monitor, and supporting control software and hardware. Our experimental evaluation benchmarks operational Private 5G and LTE networks running at full line rate. In a realistic indoor office scenario, 5G experimental results demonstrate an 8.58~dB average SNR gain, and an average throughput gain of 10.77 Mbps under a single gNB, and 12.84 Mbps under three gNBs, corresponding to throughput improvements of 18.4% and 19.5%, respectively. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
  10. Rapid delay variations in today’s access networks impair the QoE of low-latency, interactive applications, such as video conferencing. To tackle this problem, we propose Athena, a framework that correlates high-resolution measurements from Layer 1 to Layer 7 to remove the fog from the window through which today’s video-conferencing congestion-control algorithms see the network. This cross-layer view of the network empowers the networking community to revisit and re-evaluate their network designs and application scheduling and rate-adaptation algorithms in light of the complex, heterogeneous networks that are in use today, paving the way for network-aware applications and application-aware networks. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 18, 2025