Logo image
Empirically measuring the QoS sensitivity of interactive online game players
Conference paper   Open access

Empirically measuring the QoS sensitivity of interactive online game players

G. Armitage and S. Zander
Australian Telecommunications Networks and Applications Conference (ATNAC2004) (Sydney, Australia, 08/12/2004–10/12/2004)
2004
pdf
empirically measuring.pdfDownloadView
Open Access

Abstract

It is widely assumed that highly interactive online games require a minimum quality of service (QoS) from the network, which suggests that offering premium IP service quality for game players may be a new source of revenue for Internet service providers (ISPs). In order to offer such services, ISPs must know the upper bounds of the performance metrics players are willing to tolerate. This paper reports on our preliminary attempts to experimentally establish performance bounds for different types of online games. First we placed a group of players in a controlled network environment, where artificial network delay and loss is introduced during their games. We logged objective measures (game performance indicators from the game server) and used a questionnaire to establish a subjective measure of user perceived quality as a function of different network conditions. Our paper concludes with an analysis of our results and a comparison with previous work based on indirect measurements.

Details

Metrics

648 File views/ downloads
157 Record Views
Logo image