11,053 research outputs found
Cluster Based Algorithm for Energy Conservation and Lifetime Maximization in Wireless Sensor Networks
One of the most critical issues in designing Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is to minimize the energy consumption. In Wireless Sensor Networks, data aggregation reduces the redundancy among sensed data and optimal sensor routing algorithm provides strategy for data gathering with minimum energy. The energy consumption is reduced by combining data fusion and cluster based routing. In this paper, we propose a K-means Fusion Steiner Tree (KFST) for energy efficient data gathering in sensor networks, which optimizes data transmission cost and the data fusion cost. This cost reduction increases the lifetime of a Sensor Network. The result of the proposed protocol KFST is compared with Adaptive Fusion Steiner Tree (AFST) and KFST produces better result than the existing protocols
Energy Efficient Ant Colony Algorithms for Data Aggregation in Wireless Sensor Networks
In this paper, a family of ant colony algorithms called DAACA for data
aggregation has been presented which contains three phases: the initialization,
packet transmission and operations on pheromones. After initialization, each
node estimates the remaining energy and the amount of pheromones to compute the
probabilities used for dynamically selecting the next hop. After certain rounds
of transmissions, the pheromones adjustment is performed periodically, which
combines the advantages of both global and local pheromones adjustment for
evaporating or depositing pheromones. Four different pheromones adjustment
strategies are designed to achieve the global optimal network lifetime, namely
Basic-DAACA, ES-DAACA, MM-DAACA and ACS-DAACA. Compared with some other data
aggregation algorithms, DAACA shows higher superiority on average degree of
nodes, energy efficiency, prolonging the network lifetime, computation
complexity and success ratio of one hop transmission. At last we analyze the
characteristic of DAACA in the aspects of robustness, fault tolerance and
scalability.Comment: To appear in Journal of Computer and System Science
Secure and Privacy-Preserving Data Aggregation Protocols for Wireless Sensor Networks
This chapter discusses the need of security and privacy protection mechanisms
in aggregation protocols used in wireless sensor networks (WSN). It presents a
comprehensive state of the art discussion on the various privacy protection
mechanisms used in WSNs and particularly focuses on the CPDA protocols proposed
by He et al. (INFOCOM 2007). It identifies a security vulnerability in the CPDA
protocol and proposes a mechanism to plug that vulnerability. To demonstrate
the need of security in aggregation process, the chapter further presents
various threats in WSN aggregation mechanisms. A large number of existing
protocols for secure aggregation in WSN are discussed briefly and a protocol is
proposed for secure aggregation which can detect false data injected by
malicious nodes in a WSN. The performance of the protocol is also presented.
The chapter concludes while highlighting some future directions of research in
secure data aggregation in WSNs.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
Towards a Queueing-Based Framework for In-Network Function Computation
We seek to develop network algorithms for function computation in sensor
networks. Specifically, we want dynamic joint aggregation, routing, and
scheduling algorithms that have analytically provable performance benefits due
to in-network computation as compared to simple data forwarding. To this end,
we define a class of functions, the Fully-Multiplexible functions, which
includes several functions such as parity, MAX, and k th -order statistics. For
such functions we exactly characterize the maximum achievable refresh rate of
the network in terms of an underlying graph primitive, the min-mincut. In
acyclic wireline networks, we show that the maximum refresh rate is achievable
by a simple algorithm that is dynamic, distributed, and only dependent on local
information. In the case of wireless networks, we provide a MaxWeight-like
algorithm with dynamic flow splitting, which is shown to be throughput-optimal
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