Abstract: This paper considers energy-efficient connectivity for Internet of Things (IoT) devices in a coexistence scenario between two distinctive communication models: pull- and push-based communication models. In pull-based communication, the base station (BS) decides when to retrieve a specific type of data from the IoT devices equipped with wake-up receivers, while in push-based communication, the IoT device decides when and which data to transmit. To efficiently manage both types of traffic, this paper applies content-based wake-up (CoWu) and designs a medium access control (MAC) frame. This enables the BS to activate a subset of pull-based nodes and collect the relevant data to fulfill its tasks, while receiving data from the push-based communication nodes. This paper analyzes the basic trade-off through the MAC layer operations: allocating longer duration for collecting data from pull-based nodes can lead to high retrieval accuracy while decreasing the probability of data transmission success for push-based nodes, and vice versa. Numerical results show that CoWu can manage communication requirements for both pull-based and push-based nodes while realizing high energy efficiency (up to 38%) of IoT devices, compared to the baseline.
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