How artificial intelligence affects 5G network standards

A long time ago, from Korea Telecom, Ericsson, Fujitsu, Huawei, Orange, Nokia, Samsung, Korea Electronics and Telecommunications Research Association (ETRI), KDDI, NEC, Tunis Telecom, Telkom, Trace Media, Japan Telecommunications Technical Committee (TTC), Japan Executives at the Institute of Information and Communications Research (NICT) have conducted extensive discussions focusing on machine learning and how artificial intelligence (AI) can help smart 5G networks.

How artificial intelligence affects 5G network standards

Intelligent use of network automation, enhancement and expansion.

Operators have seized this opportunity to share how they provide users with unique artificial intelligence services.

Korean operator Korea Telecom cited an example of how their artificial intelligence and carrier data services can help urban night bus route planning and avoid congestion.

Dr. Dong-myun Lee, Chief Technology Officer and Senior Executive Vice President of Korea Telecom, said that when operators' margins are squeezed, everyone is looking for better ways to improve network efficiency. He also called on ITU to solicit from operators the best practices on “how to apply AI to more efficient networks”.

In the context of future 5G systems, artificial intelligence will help to better understand the behavior of users and networks, optimize the use of scarce radio resources, and over time, predict the impact of relevant decisions.

In response to the idea of ​​“automatically detecting, resolving anomalies, other inefficient events, and predictive maintenance that will help control the operational costs of network operators and other service providers,” participants agreed and urged that new research should cover Analysis of existing and emerging standards and norms in the field.

Convergence requires flexible network solutions

Executives agree that the use of intelligence and virtualization at the edge of the network demonstrates the convergence of the IT and telecommunications industries.

Incorporating rapidly growing entry-level “OTT” participants and other industry sectors into the ICT ecosystem, a new set of requirements requires a mass, flexible, programmable and scalable network solution.

Executives called on the ITU's Standardization Sector (ITU-T) to consider these new requirements: emphasizing short-haul, high-bandwidth, low-cost data center interconnection, edge cloud interconnection, and the use of emerging pre- and medium-transmission technologies. Support for the deployment of 5G systems.

Participants also encouraged ITU-T to work with OTT and vertical sector organizations to identify and understand new network requirements and to respond in a timely and accurate manner.

Noah Luo, Senior Manager of Huawei's European Standards and Industry Department, said: "ITU-T needs to consider how to win the trust of OTT and vertical industry participants and attract them to participate in ITU-T network standards." This will help avoid fixed networks. Further collapse of the industry.

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