18,266 research outputs found
OLIMPO, An Ad-Hoc Wireless Sensor Network Simulator for Public Utilities Applications
This paper introduces OLIMPO, an useful
simulation tool for researchers who are developing wireless
sensor communication protocols. OLIMPO is a discreteevent
simulator design to be easily recon gured by the user,
providing a way to design, develop and test communication
protocols.
In particular, we have designed a self-organizing wireless
sensor network for low data rate. Our premise is that, due
to their inherent spread location over large areas, wireless
sensor networks are well-suited for SCADA applications,
which require relatively simple control and monitoring.
To show the facilities of our simulator, we have studied
our network protocol with OLIMPO, developing several
simulations. The purpose of these simulations is to demonstrate,
quantitatively, the capability of our network to
support this kind of applications
SIR: A New Wireless Sensor Network Routing Protocol Based on Artificial Intelligence
Currently, Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) are formed by
hundreds of low energy and low cost micro-electro-mechanical systems.
Routing and low power consumption have become important research issues
to interconnect this kind of networks. However, conventional Quality
of Service routing models, are not suitable for ad hoc sensor networks,
due to the dynamic nature of such systems. This paper introduces a new
QoS-driven routing algorithm, named SIR: Sensor Intelligence Routing.
We have designed an artificial neural network based on Kohonen self
organizing features map. Every node implements this artificial neural
network forming a distributed intelligence and ubiquitous computing
system
EYES - Energy Efficient Sensor Networks
The EYES project (IST-2001-34734) is a three years European research project on self-organizing and collaborative energy-efficient sensor networks. It will address the convergence of distributed information processing, wireless communications, and mobile computing. The goal of the project is to develop the architecture and the technology which enables the creation of a new generation of sensors that can effectively network together so as to provide a flexible platform for the support of a large variety of mobile sensor network applications. This document gives an overview of the EYES project
Improved Fair-Zone technique using Mobility Prediction in WSN
The self-organizational ability of ad-hoc Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) has
led them to be the most popular choice in ubiquitous computing. Clustering
sensor nodes organizing them hierarchically have proven to be an effective
method to provide better data aggregation and scalability for the sensor
network while conserving limited energy. It has some limitation in energy and
mobility of nodes. In this paper we propose a mobility prediction technique
which tries overcoming above mentioned problems and improves the life time of
the network. The technique used here is Exponential Moving Average for online
updates of nodal contact probability in cluster based network.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, Published in International Journal Of Advanced
Smart Sensor Network Systems (IJASSN
Snapshots of the EYES project
The EYES project (IST-2001-34734) is a three years European research project on self-organizing and collaborative energy-efficient sensor networks. It addresses the convergence of distributed information processing, wireless communications, and mobile computing. The goal of the project is to develop the architecture and the technology which enables the creation of a new generation of sensors that can effectively network together so as to provide a flexible platform for the support of a large variety of mobile sensor network applications. This paper provides a broad overview of the EYES project and highlights some approaches and results of the architecture
An analytic Study of the Key Factors Influencing the Design and Routing Techniques of a Wireless Sensor Network
A wireless sensor network contains various nodes having certain sensing, processing & communication capabilities. Actually they are multifunctional battery operated nodes called motes. These motes are small in size & battery constrained. They are operated by a power source. A wireless sensor network consists of a huge number of tiny sensor nodes which are deployed either randomly or according to some predefined distribution. The sensors nodes in a sensor network are cooperative among themselves having self-organizing ability. This ensures that a wireless network serves a wide variety of applications. Few of them are weather monitoring, health, security & military etc. As their applications are wide, this requires that sensors in a sensor network must play their role very efficiently. But, as discussed above, the sensor nodes have energy limitation. This limitation leads failure of nodes after certain round of communication. So, a sensor network suffers with sensors having energy limitations. Beside this, sensor nodes in a sensor network must fulfill connectivity & coverage requirements. In this paper, we have discussed various issues affecting the design of a wireless sensor network. This provides the readers various research issues in designing a wireless sensor network
A new QoS routing algorithm based on self-organizing maps for wireless sensor networks
For the past ten years, many authors have focused
their investigations in wireless sensor networks. Different
researching issues have been extensively developed: power
consumption, MAC protocols, self-organizing network algorithms,
data-aggregation schemes, routing protocols, QoS
management, etc. Due to the constraints on data processing
and power consumption, the use of artificial intelligence
has been historically discarded. However, in some special
scenarios the features of neural networks are appropriate to
develop complex tasks such as path discovery. In this paper,
we explore and compare the performance of two very well
known routing paradigms, directed diffusion and Energy-
Aware Routing, with our routing algorithm, named SIR,
which has the novelty of being based on the introduction of
neural networks in every sensor node. Extensive simulations
over our wireless sensor network simulator, OLIMPO, have
been carried out to study the efficiency of the introduction
of neural networks. A comparison of the results obtained
with every routing protocol is analyzed. This paper attempts
to encourage the use of artificial intelligence techniques in
wireless sensor nodes
Using artificial intelligence in routing schemes for wireless networks
For the latest 10 years, many authors have focused their investigations in wireless sensor networks. Different researching issues have
been extensively developed: power consumption, MAC protocols, self-organizing network algorithms, data-aggregation schemes, routing
protocols, QoS management, etc. Due to the constraints on data processing and power consumption, the use of artificial intelligence has
been historically discarded. However, in some special scenarios the features of neural networks are appropriate to develop complex tasks
such as path discovery. In this paper, we explore the performance of two very well-known routing paradigms, directed diffusion and
Energy-Aware Routing, and our routing algorithm, named SIR, which has the novelty of being based on the introduction of neural networks
in every sensor node. Extensive simulations over our wireless sensor network simulator, OLIMPO, have been carried out to study
the efficiency of the introduction of neural networks. A comparison of the results obtained with every routing protocol is analyzed. This
paper attempts to encourage the use of artificial intelligence techniques in wireless sensor nodes
Reliable routing protocols for dynamic wireless ad hoc and sensor networks
The vision of ubiquitous computing requires the development of devices and technologies, which can be pervasive without being intrusive. The basic components of such a smart environment will be small nodes with sensing and wireless communications capabilities, able to organize flexibly into a network for data collection and delivery. The constant improvements in digital circuit technology, has made the deployment of such small, inexpensive, low-power, distributed devices, which are capable of information gathering, processing, and communication in miniature packaging, a reality.\ud
Realizing such a network presents very significant challenges, especially at the protocol and software level. Major steps forward are required in the field of communications protocol, data processing, and application support. Although sensor nodes will be equipped with a power supply (battery) and embedded processor that makes them autonomous and self-aware, their functionality and capabilities will be very limited. The resource limitations of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), especially in terms of energy, require novel and collaborative approach for the wireless communication. Therefore, collaboration between nodes is essential to deliver smart services in a ubiquitous setting. Current research in this area generally assumes a rather static network, leading to a strong performance degradation in a dynamic environment. In this thesis we investigate new algorithms for routing in dynamic wireless environment and evaluate their feasibility through experimentation. These algorithms will be key for building self-organizing and collaborative sensor networks\ud
that show emergent behavior and can operate in a challenging environment where\ud
nodes move, fail and energy is a scarce resource.\ud
We develop the technology needed for building self-organizing and collabora-\ud
tive sensor networks using reconfigurable smart sensor nodes, which are self-aware,self-reconfigurable and autonomous. This technology will enable the creation of a new generation of sensors, which can effectively network together so as to provide a flexible platform for the support of a large variety of mobile sensor network applications. In this thesis, we address the dynamics of sink nodes, sensor nodes and event in the routing of wireless sensor networks, while maintaining high reliability and low energy consumption. The hypothesis is that this requires different routing protocols and approaches. The varying application scenarios of wireless sensor\ud
networks require different routing protocols and approaches as well.\ud
This thesis has three major contributions to the routing in dynamic wireless\ud
sensor networks. Firstly, a combination between a new multipath on-Demand Rout-\ud
ing protocol and a data-splitting scheme which results in an e±cient solution for high reliability and low traffic. Secondly, a cross-layered approach with a self-organizing medium access control protocol and a tightly integrated source routing protocol is designed for high mobility sensor networks. Finally, a data-centric approach based on cost estimation is designed to disseminate aggregated data from data source to destination with high efficiency
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