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Quality of experience

Quality of experience (QoE) is a measure of the delight or annoyance of a customer's experiences with a service (e.g., web browsing, phone call, TV broadcast).[1] QoE focuses on the entire service experience; it is a holistic concept, similar to the field of user experience, but with its roots in telecommunication.[2] QoE is an emerging multidisciplinary field based on social psychology, cognitive science, economics, and engineering science, focused on understanding overall human quality requirements.

Definition and concepts edit

In 2013, within the context of the COST Action QUALINET, QoE has been defined as:[1]

The degree of delight or annoyance of the user of an application or service. It results from the fulfillment of his or her expectations with respect to the utility and / or enjoyment of the application or service in the light of the user’s personality and current state.

This definition has been adopted in 2016 by the International Telecommunication Union in Recommendation ITU-T P.10/G.100.[3] Before, various definitions of QoE had existed in the domain, with the above-mentioned definition now finding wide acceptance in the community.

QoE has historically emerged from Quality of Service (QoS), which attempts to objectively measure service parameters (such as packet loss rates or average throughput). QoS measurement is most of the time not related to a customer, but to the media or network itself. QoE however is a purely subjective measure from the user’s perspective of the overall quality of the service provided, by capturing people’s aesthetic and hedonic needs.[4]

QoE looks at a vendor's or purveyor's offering from the standpoint of the customer or end user, and asks, "What mix of goods, services, and support, do you think will provide you with the perception that the total product is providing you with the experience you desired and/or expected?" It then asks, "Is this what the vendor/purveyor has actually provided?" If not, "What changes need to be made to enhance your total experience?" In short, QoE provides an assessment of human expectations, feelings, perceptions, cognition and satisfaction with respect to a particular product, service or application.[5]

QoE is a blueprint of all human subjective and objective quality needs and experiences arising from the interaction of a person with technology and with business entities in a particular context.[4] Although QoE is perceived as subjective, it is an important measure that counts for customers of a service. Being able to measure it in a controlled manner helps operators understand what may be wrong with their services and how to improve them.

QoE factors edit

QoE aims at taking into consideration every factor that contributes to a user's perceived quality of a system or service. This includes system, human and contextual factors.[6] The following so-called "influence factors" have been identified and classified by Reiter et al.:[6]

  • Human Influence Factors
    • Low-level processing (visual and auditory acuity, gender, age, mood, …)
    • Higher-level processing (cognitive processes, socio-cultural and economic background, expectations, needs and goals, other personality traits…)
  • System Influence Factors
    • Content-related
    • Media-related (encoding, resolution, sample rate, …)
    • Network-related (bandwidth, delay, jitter, …)
    • Device-related (screen resolution, display size, …)
  • Context Influence Factors
    • Physical context (location and space)
    • Temporal context (time of day, frequency of use, …)
    • Social context (inter-personal relations during experience)
    • Economic context
    • Task context (multitasking, interruptions, task type)
    • Technical and information context (relationship between systems)

Studies in the field of QoE have typically focused on system factors, primarily due to its origin in the QoS and network engineering domains. Through the use of dedicated test laboratories, the context is often sought to be kept constant.

QoE versus User Experience edit

QoE is strongly related to but different from the field of User Experience (UX), which also focuses on users' experiences with services. Historically, QoE has emerged from telecommunication research, while UX has its roots in Human–Computer Interaction.[2] Both fields can be considered multi-disciplinary. In contrast to UX, the goal of improving QoE for users was more strongly motivated by economic needs.[7]

Wechsung and De Moor identify the following key differences between the fields:[2]

QoE UX
Origins Telecommunication Human–Computer Interaction
Driving Force Technology-centered Human-centered
Theoretical Basis Measurement and instrumentation approaches

Historical lack of theoretical frameworks

Non-instrumental research

Theoretic background in hedonic psychology

Measurement and Evaluation Predominantly quantitative research

Empirical–positivist research

Predominantly qualitative methods

Interpretative and constructivist research

Experience and Perceptions Focus on “quality formation” and perception of quality Focus on “experience” concept

QoE measurement edit

As a measure of the end-to-end performance at the service level from the user's perspective, QoE is an important metric for the design of systems and engineering processes. This is particularly relevant for video services because – due to their high traffic demands –, bad network performance may highly affect the user's experience.[8][9] So, when designing systems, the expected output, i.e. the expected QoE, is often taken into account – also as a system output metric and optimization goal.

To measure this level of QoE, human ratings can be used. The mean opinion score (MOS) is a widely used measure for assessing the quality of media signals. It is a limited form of QoE measurement, relating to a specific media type, in a controlled environment and without explicitly taking into account user expectations. The MOS as an indicator of experienced quality has been used for audio and speech communication, as well as for the assessment of quality of Internet video, television and other multimedia signals,[10] and web browsing.[11] Due to inherent limitations in measuring QoE in a single scalar value, the usefulness of the MOS is often debated.[12]

Subjective quality evaluation requires a lot of human resources, establishing it as a time-consuming process. Objective evaluation methods can provide quality results faster, but require dedicated computing resources. Since such instrumental video quality algorithms are often developed based on a limited set of subjective data, their QoE prediction accuracy may be low when compared to human ratings.

QoE metrics are often measured at the end devices and can conceptually be seen as the remaining quality after the distortion introduced during the preparation of the content and the delivery through the network, until it reaches the decoder at the end device. There are several elements in the media preparation and delivery chain, and some of them may introduce distortion. This causes degradation of the content, and several elements in this chain can be considered as ”QoE-relevant“ for the offered services. The causes of degradation are applicable for any multimedia service, that is, not exclusive to video or speech. Typical degradations occur at the encoding system (compression degradation), transport network, access network (e.g., packet loss or packet delay), home network (e.g. WiFi performance) and end device (e.g. decoding performance).

QoE management edit

Several QoE-centric network management and bandwidth management solutions have been proposed, which aim to improve the QoE delivered to the end-users.[13][14][15][16]

When managing a network, QoE fairness may be taken into account in order to keep the users sufficiently satisfied (i.e., high QoE) in a fair manner. From a QoE perspective, network resources and multimedia services should be managed in order to guarantee specific QoE levels instead of classical QoS parameters, which are unable to reflect the actual delivered QoE. A pure QoE-centric management is challenged by the nature of the Internet itself, as the Internet protocols and architecture were not originally designed to support today's complex and high demanding multimedia services.

As an example for an implementation of QoE management, network nodes can become QoE-aware by estimating the status of the multimedia service as perceived by the end-users.[17] This information can then be used to improve the delivery of the multimedia service over the network and proactively improve the users' QoE.[18] This can be achieved, for example, via traffic shaping. QoE management gives the service provider and network operator the capability to minimize storage and network resources by allocating only the resources that are sufficient to maintain a specific level of user satisfaction.

As it may involve limiting resources for some users or services in order to increase the overall network performance and QoE, the practice of QoE management requires that net neutrality regulations are considered.[19]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Qualinet White Paper on Definitions of Quality of Experience (2012). European Network on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services (COST Action IC 1003), Patrick Le Callet, Sebastian Möller and Andrew Perkis, eds., Lausanne, Switzerland, Version 1.2, March 2013
  2. ^ a b c Wechsung, Ina; Moor, Katrien De (2014). "Quality of Experience Versus User Experience". In Möller, Sebastian; Raake, Alexander (eds.). Quality of Experience. T-Labs Series in Telecommunication Services. Springer International Publishing. pp. 35–54. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-02681-7_3. ISBN 9783319026800.
  3. ^ Recommendation ITU-T P.10/G.100: Vocabulary for performance, quality of service and quality of experience. https://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-P.10
  4. ^ a b Laghari, K. U. Rehman; Connelly, K. (April 2012). "Toward total quality of experience: A QoE model in a communication ecosystem". IEEE Communications Magazine. 50 (4): 58–65. doi:10.1109/MCOM.2012.6178834. S2CID 1123280.
  5. ^ Laghari, Khalil ur Rehman; Crespi, Noel; Molina, B.; Palau, C.E. (2011-03-25). "QoE Aware Service Delivery in Distributed Environment". 2011 IEEE Workshops of International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications (PDF). IEEE. pp. 837–842. doi:10.1109/WAINA.2011.58. ISBN 978-1-61284-829-7. S2CID 16342388. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  6. ^ a b Reiter, Ulrich; Brunnström, Kjell; Moor, Katrien De; Larabi, Mohamed-Chaker; Pereira, Manuela; Pinheiro, Antonio; You, Junyong; Zgank, Andrej (2014-01-01). "Factors Influencing Quality of Experience". In Möller, Sebastian; Raake, Alexander (eds.). Quality of Experience. T-Labs Series in Telecommunication Services. Springer International Publishing. pp. 55–72. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-02681-7_4. ISBN 978-3-319-02680-0.
  7. ^ Reichl, Peter; Tuffin, Bruno; Maillé, Patrick (2012). "Economics of Quality of Experience". In Hadjiantonis, Antonis M.; Stiller, Burkhard (eds.). Telecommunication Economics. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 7216. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 158–166. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-30382-1_21. ISBN 9783642303814.
  8. ^ Dobrian, Florin; Awan, Asad; Joseph, Dilip; Ganjam, Aditya; Zhan, Jibin; Sekar, Vyas; Stoica, Ion; Zhang, Hui (2013-03-01). "Understanding the Impact of Video Quality on User Engagement". Commun. ACM. 56 (3): 91–99. doi:10.1145/2428556.2428577. ISSN 0001-0782. S2CID 52897451.
  9. ^ Krishnan, S. S.; Sitaraman, R. K. (2013-12-01). "Video Stream Quality Impacts Viewer Behavior: Inferring Causality Using Quasi-Experimental Designs". IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking. 21 (6): 2001–2014. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.649.7730. doi:10.1109/TNET.2013.2281542. ISSN 1063-6692. S2CID 33425050.
  10. ^ Winkler, S. (2009-12-01). "Video quality measurement standards — Current status and trends". 2009 7th International Conference on Information, Communications and Signal Processing (ICICS). pp. 1–5. doi:10.1109/ICICS.2009.5397585. ISBN 978-1-4244-4656-8. S2CID 17492762.
  11. ^ Egger, S.; Hossfeld, T.; Schatz, R.; Fiedler, M. (2012-07-01). "Waiting times in quality of experience for web based services". 2012 Fourth International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience. pp. 86–96. doi:10.1109/QoMEX.2012.6263888. ISBN 978-1-4673-0726-0. S2CID 22818532.
  12. ^ Hoßfeld, Tobias; Heegaard, Poul E.; Varela, Martín; Möller, Sebastian (2016-12-01). "QoE beyond the MOS: an in-depth look at QoE via better metrics and their relation to MOS". Quality and User Experience. 1 (1): 2. arXiv:1607.00321. doi:10.1007/s41233-016-0002-1. ISSN 2366-0139. S2CID 35445592.
  13. ^ Baraković, Sabina; Skorin-Kapov, Lea (2013). "Survey and Challenges of QoE Management Issues in Wireless Networks". Journal of Computer Networks and Communications. 2013: 1–28. doi:10.1155/2013/165146.
  14. ^ Hoßfeld, T.; Schatz, R.; Varela, M.; Timmerer, C. (2012-04-01). "Challenges of QoE management for cloud applications". IEEE Communications Magazine. 50 (4): 28–36. doi:10.1109/MCOM.2012.6178831. ISSN 0163-6804. S2CID 12740736.
  15. ^ Seufert, M.; Egger, S.; Slanina, M.; Zinner, T.; Hobfeld, T.; Tran-Gia, P. (2015-01-01). "A Survey on Quality of Experience of HTTP Adaptive Streaming". IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials. 17 (1): 469–492. doi:10.1109/COMST.2014.2360940. ISSN 1553-877X. S2CID 18220375.
  16. ^ Baraković, Sabina; Skorin-Kapov, Lea (2013-03-23). "Survey and Challenges of QoE Management Issues in Wireless Networks". Journal of Computer Networks and Communications. 2013: 1–28. doi:10.1155/2013/165146. ISSN 2090-7141.
  17. ^ Huysegems, R.; De Vleeschauwer, B.; De Schepper, K.; Hawinkel, C.; Wu, Tingyao; Laevens, K.; Van Leekwijck, W. (2012-06-01). "Session reconstruction for HTTP adaptive streaming: Laying the foundation for network-based QoE monitoring". 2012 IEEE 20th International Workshop on Quality of Service. pp. 1–9. doi:10.1109/IWQoS.2012.6245987. ISBN 978-1-4673-1298-1. S2CID 18377481.
  18. ^ Petrangeli, S.; Wauters, T.; Huysegems, R.; Bostoen, T.; De Turck, F. (2015-05-01). "Network-based dynamic prioritization of HTTP adaptive streams to avoid video freezes". 2015 IFIP/IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management (IM). pp. 1242–1248. doi:10.1109/INM.2015.7140475. hdl:1854/LU-7016579. ISBN 978-1-4799-8241-7. S2CID 955351.
  19. ^ Krämer, Jan; Wiewiorra, Lukas; Weinhardt, Christof (2013). "Net neutrality: A progress report". Telecommunications Policy. 37 (9): 794–813. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.258.5878. doi:10.1016/j.telpol.2012.08.005.

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Quality of experience QoE is a measure of the delight or annoyance of a customer s experiences with a service e g web browsing phone call TV broadcast 1 QoE focuses on the entire service experience it is a holistic concept similar to the field of user experience but with its roots in telecommunication 2 QoE is an emerging multidisciplinary field based on social psychology cognitive science economics and engineering science focused on understanding overall human quality requirements Contents 1 Definition and concepts 2 QoE factors 3 QoE versus User Experience 4 QoE measurement 5 QoE management 6 ReferencesDefinition and concepts editIn 2013 within the context of the COST Action QUALINET QoE has been defined as 1 The degree of delight or annoyance of the user of an application or service It results from the fulfillment of his or her expectations with respect to the utility and or enjoyment of the application or service in the light of the user s personality and current state This definition has been adopted in 2016 by the International Telecommunication Union in Recommendation ITU T P 10 G 100 3 Before various definitions of QoE had existed in the domain with the above mentioned definition now finding wide acceptance in the community QoE has historically emerged from Quality of Service QoS which attempts to objectively measure service parameters such as packet loss rates or average throughput QoS measurement is most of the time not related to a customer but to the media or network itself QoE however is a purely subjective measure from the user s perspective of the overall quality of the service provided by capturing people s aesthetic and hedonic needs 4 QoE looks at a vendor s or purveyor s offering from the standpoint of the customer or end user and asks What mix of goods services and support do you think will provide you with the perception that the total product is providing you with the experience you desired and or expected It then asks Is this what the vendor purveyor has actually provided If not What changes need to be made to enhance your total experience In short QoE provides an assessment of human expectations feelings perceptions cognition and satisfaction with respect to a particular product service or application 5 QoE is a blueprint of all human subjective and objective quality needs and experiences arising from the interaction of a person with technology and with business entities in a particular context 4 Although QoE is perceived as subjective it is an important measure that counts for customers of a service Being able to measure it in a controlled manner helps operators understand what may be wrong with their services and how to improve them QoE factors editQoE aims at taking into consideration every factor that contributes to a user s perceived quality of a system or service This includes system human and contextual factors 6 The following so called influence factors have been identified and classified by Reiter et al 6 Human Influence Factors Low level processing visual and auditory acuity gender age mood Higher level processing cognitive processes socio cultural and economic background expectations needs and goals other personality traits System Influence Factors Content related Media related encoding resolution sample rate Network related bandwidth delay jitter Device related screen resolution display size Context Influence Factors Physical context location and space Temporal context time of day frequency of use Social context inter personal relations during experience Economic context Task context multitasking interruptions task type Technical and information context relationship between systems Studies in the field of QoE have typically focused on system factors primarily due to its origin in the QoS and network engineering domains Through the use of dedicated test laboratories the context is often sought to be kept constant QoE versus User Experience editQoE is strongly related to but different from the field of User Experience UX which also focuses on users experiences with services Historically QoE has emerged from telecommunication research while UX has its roots in Human Computer Interaction 2 Both fields can be considered multi disciplinary In contrast to UX the goal of improving QoE for users was more strongly motivated by economic needs 7 Wechsung and De Moor identify the following key differences between the fields 2 QoE UXOrigins Telecommunication Human Computer InteractionDriving Force Technology centered Human centeredTheoretical Basis Measurement and instrumentation approaches Historical lack of theoretical frameworks Non instrumental research Theoretic background in hedonic psychologyMeasurement and Evaluation Predominantly quantitative research Empirical positivist research Predominantly qualitative methods Interpretative and constructivist researchExperience and Perceptions Focus on quality formation and perception of quality Focus on experience conceptQoE measurement editAs a measure of the end to end performance at the service level from the user s perspective QoE is an important metric for the design of systems and engineering processes This is particularly relevant for video services because due to their high traffic demands bad network performance may highly affect the user s experience 8 9 So when designing systems the expected output i e the expected QoE is often taken into account also as a system output metric and optimization goal To measure this level of QoE human ratings can be used The mean opinion score MOS is a widely used measure for assessing the quality of media signals It is a limited form of QoE measurement relating to a specific media type in a controlled environment and without explicitly taking into account user expectations The MOS as an indicator of experienced quality has been used for audio and speech communication as well as for the assessment of quality of Internet video television and other multimedia signals 10 and web browsing 11 Due to inherent limitations in measuring QoE in a single scalar value the usefulness of the MOS is often debated 12 Subjective quality evaluation requires a lot of human resources establishing it as a time consuming process Objective evaluation methods can provide quality results faster but require dedicated computing resources Since such instrumental video quality algorithms are often developed based on a limited set of subjective data their QoE prediction accuracy may be low when compared to human ratings QoE metrics are often measured at the end devices and can conceptually be seen as the remaining quality after the distortion introduced during the preparation of the content and the delivery through the network until it reaches the decoder at the end device There are several elements in the media preparation and delivery chain and some of them may introduce distortion This causes degradation of the content and several elements in this chain can be considered as QoE relevant for the offered services The causes of degradation are applicable for any multimedia service that is not exclusive to video or speech Typical degradations occur at the encoding system compression degradation transport network access network e g packet loss or packet delay home network e g WiFi performance and end device e g decoding performance QoE management editSeveral QoE centric network management and bandwidth management solutions have been proposed which aim to improve the QoE delivered to the end users 13 14 15 16 When managing a network QoE fairness may be taken into account in order to keep the users sufficiently satisfied i e high QoE in a fair manner From a QoE perspective network resources and multimedia services should be managed in order to guarantee specific QoE levels instead of classical QoS parameters which are unable to reflect the actual delivered QoE A pure QoE centric management is challenged by the nature of the Internet itself as the Internet protocols and architecture were not originally designed to support today s complex and high demanding multimedia services As an example for an implementation of QoE management network nodes can become QoE aware by estimating the status of the multimedia service as perceived by the end users 17 This information can then be used to improve the delivery of the multimedia service over the network and proactively improve the users QoE 18 This can be achieved for example via traffic shaping QoE management gives the service provider and network operator the capability to minimize storage and network resources by allocating only the resources that are sufficient to maintain a specific level of user satisfaction As it may involve limiting resources for some users or services in order to increase the overall network performance and QoE the practice of QoE management requires that net neutrality regulations are considered 19 References edit a b Qualinet White Paper on Definitions of Quality of Experience 2012 European Network on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services COST Action IC 1003 Patrick Le Callet Sebastian Moller and Andrew Perkis eds Lausanne Switzerland Version 1 2 March 2013 a b c Wechsung Ina Moor Katrien De 2014 Quality of Experience Versus User Experience In Moller Sebastian Raake Alexander eds Quality of Experience T Labs Series in Telecommunication Services Springer International Publishing pp 35 54 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 02681 7 3 ISBN 9783319026800 Recommendation ITU T P 10 G 100 Vocabulary for performance quality of service and quality of experience https www itu int rec T REC P 10 a b Laghari K U Rehman Connelly K April 2012 Toward total quality of experience A QoE model in a communication ecosystem IEEE Communications Magazine 50 4 58 65 doi 10 1109 MCOM 2012 6178834 S2CID 1123280 Laghari Khalil ur Rehman Crespi Noel Molina B Palau C E 2011 03 25 QoE Aware Service Delivery in Distributed Environment 2011 IEEE Workshops of International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications PDF IEEE pp 837 842 doi 10 1109 WAINA 2011 58 ISBN 978 1 61284 829 7 S2CID 16342388 Retrieved 2014 03 03 a b Reiter Ulrich Brunnstrom Kjell Moor Katrien De Larabi Mohamed Chaker Pereira Manuela Pinheiro Antonio You Junyong Zgank Andrej 2014 01 01 Factors Influencing Quality of Experience In Moller Sebastian Raake Alexander eds Quality of Experience T Labs Series in Telecommunication Services Springer International Publishing pp 55 72 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 02681 7 4 ISBN 978 3 319 02680 0 Reichl Peter Tuffin Bruno Maille Patrick 2012 Economics of Quality of Experience In Hadjiantonis Antonis M Stiller Burkhard eds Telecommunication Economics Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 7216 Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 158 166 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 30382 1 21 ISBN 9783642303814 Dobrian Florin Awan Asad Joseph Dilip Ganjam Aditya Zhan Jibin Sekar Vyas Stoica Ion Zhang Hui 2013 03 01 Understanding the Impact of Video Quality on User Engagement Commun ACM 56 3 91 99 doi 10 1145 2428556 2428577 ISSN 0001 0782 S2CID 52897451 Krishnan S S Sitaraman R K 2013 12 01 Video Stream Quality Impacts Viewer Behavior Inferring Causality Using Quasi Experimental Designs IEEE ACM Transactions on Networking 21 6 2001 2014 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 649 7730 doi 10 1109 TNET 2013 2281542 ISSN 1063 6692 S2CID 33425050 Winkler S 2009 12 01 Video quality measurement standards Current status and trends 2009 7th International Conference on Information Communications and Signal Processing ICICS pp 1 5 doi 10 1109 ICICS 2009 5397585 ISBN 978 1 4244 4656 8 S2CID 17492762 Egger S Hossfeld T Schatz R Fiedler M 2012 07 01 Waiting times in quality of experience for web based services 2012 Fourth International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience pp 86 96 doi 10 1109 QoMEX 2012 6263888 ISBN 978 1 4673 0726 0 S2CID 22818532 Hossfeld Tobias Heegaard Poul E Varela Martin Moller Sebastian 2016 12 01 QoE beyond the MOS an in depth look at QoE via better metrics and their relation to MOS Quality and User Experience 1 1 2 arXiv 1607 00321 doi 10 1007 s41233 016 0002 1 ISSN 2366 0139 S2CID 35445592 Barakovic Sabina Skorin Kapov Lea 2013 Survey and Challenges of QoE Management Issues in Wireless Networks Journal of Computer Networks and Communications 2013 1 28 doi 10 1155 2013 165146 Hossfeld T Schatz R Varela M Timmerer C 2012 04 01 Challenges of QoE management for cloud applications IEEE Communications Magazine 50 4 28 36 doi 10 1109 MCOM 2012 6178831 ISSN 0163 6804 S2CID 12740736 Seufert M Egger S Slanina M Zinner T Hobfeld T Tran Gia P 2015 01 01 A Survey on Quality of Experience of HTTP Adaptive Streaming IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials 17 1 469 492 doi 10 1109 COMST 2014 2360940 ISSN 1553 877X S2CID 18220375 Barakovic Sabina Skorin Kapov Lea 2013 03 23 Survey and Challenges of QoE Management Issues in Wireless Networks Journal of Computer Networks and Communications 2013 1 28 doi 10 1155 2013 165146 ISSN 2090 7141 Huysegems R De Vleeschauwer B De Schepper K Hawinkel C Wu Tingyao Laevens K Van Leekwijck W 2012 06 01 Session reconstruction for HTTP adaptive streaming Laying the foundation for network based QoE monitoring 2012 IEEE 20th International Workshop on Quality of Service pp 1 9 doi 10 1109 IWQoS 2012 6245987 ISBN 978 1 4673 1298 1 S2CID 18377481 Petrangeli S Wauters T Huysegems R Bostoen T De Turck F 2015 05 01 Network based dynamic prioritization of HTTP adaptive streams to avoid video freezes 2015 IFIP IEEE International Symposium on Integrated Network Management IM pp 1242 1248 doi 10 1109 INM 2015 7140475 hdl 1854 LU 7016579 ISBN 978 1 4799 8241 7 S2CID 955351 Kramer Jan Wiewiorra Lukas Weinhardt Christof 2013 Net neutrality A progress report Telecommunications Policy 37 9 794 813 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 258 5878 doi 10 1016 j telpol 2012 08 005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quality of experience amp oldid 1183699352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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