Various packet-based simulation tools (e.g., NS-3) have been employed for design, validation, and evaluation of new protocols for WiFi networks since they offer cost efficiency, scalability, and reproducibility. These benefits come, however, at the expense of lack of realism compared to live testbed experiments. This is attributed in a major part to the difficulty of capturing detailed characteristics of channel dynamics, bit-level protocol specification (PHY layer), and application/user behaviors in a high-fidelity manner. The performance gap predicted by simulation and live testbed becomes even more pronounced when one considers a wide diversity of device characteristics and the way each device is used by end users. For example, smartphones generally show worse WiFi performance than other WiFi devices (e.g., laptops and tablets) because smartphones suffer from additional signal loss due to hand-grips and the low antenna gains of their embedded antennas. The goal of this study is to significantly close the gap by incorporating survey- and measurement-based smartphone WiFi characteristics and realistic hand-grip models into traditional WiFi network simulators (NS-3 in this study). The enhanced WiFi simulation tool's performance prediction capability is validated through an comparative study between testbed experiments and simulations.
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