The document discusses various techniques for congestion control in computer networks. It describes how congestion occurs when the packet handling capacity of the network is exceeded. Explicit signaling techniques notify end systems of growing congestion so they can reduce transmission rates. Implicit signaling relies on end systems detecting increased delays or packet drops as implicit indicators of congestion. Common approaches include backpressure, choke packets, and adding congestion information to packet headers. Frame relay and ATM networks employ techniques such as committed information rates and explicit congestion notification to manage traffic and avoid congestion collapse.