37 research outputs found

    07151 Abstracts Collection -- Geometry in Sensor Networks

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    From 9.4.2007 to 13.4.07, the Dagstuhl Seminar 07151 ``Geometry in Sensor Networks\u27\u27 was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available

    Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT

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    The recent development in wireless networks and devices has led to novel services that will utilize wireless communication on a new level. Much effort and resources have been dedicated to establishing new communication networks that will support machine-to-machine communication and the Internet of Things (IoT). In these systems, various smart and sensory devices are deployed and connected, enabling large amounts of data to be streamed. Smart services represent new trends in mobile services, i.e., a completely new spectrum of context-aware, personalized, and intelligent services and applications. A variety of existing services utilize information about the position of the user or mobile device. The position of mobile devices is often achieved using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) chips that are integrated into all modern mobile devices (smartphones). However, GNSS is not always a reliable source of position estimates due to multipath propagation and signal blockage. Moreover, integrating GNSS chips into all devices might have a negative impact on the battery life of future IoT applications. Therefore, alternative solutions to position estimation should be investigated and implemented in IoT applications. This Special Issue, “Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT” aims to report on some of the recent research efforts on this increasingly important topic. The twelve accepted papers in this issue cover various aspects of Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT

    Performance Evaluation of Energy-Autonomous Sensors Using Power-Harvesting Beacons for Environmental Monitoring in Internet of Things (IoT)

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    Environmental conditions and air quality monitoring have become crucial today due to the undeniable changes of the climate and accelerated urbanization. To efficiently monitor environmental parameters such as temperature, humidity, and the levels of pollutants, such as fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the air, and to collect data covering vast geographical areas, the development of cheap energy-autonomous sensors for large scale deployment and fine-grained data acquisition is required. Rapid advances in electronics and communication technologies along with the emergence of paradigms such as Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs) and the Internet of Things (IoT) have led to the development of low-cost sensor devices that can operate unattended for long periods of time and communicate using wired or wireless connections through the Internet. We investigate the energy efficiency of an environmental monitoring system based on Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) beacons that operate in the IoT environment. The beacons developed measure the temperature, the relative humidity, the light intensity, and the CO2 and VOC levels in the air. Based on our analysis we have developed efficient sleep scheduling algorithms that allow the sensor nodes developed to operate autonomously without requiring the replacement of the power supply. The experimental results show that low-power sensors communicating using BLE technology can operate autonomously (from the energy perspective) in applications that monitor the environment or the air quality in indoor or outdoor settings

    Quality-of-Information Aware Sensing Node Characterisation for Optimised Energy Consumption in Visual Sensor Networks

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    Energy consumption is one of the primary concerns in a resource constrained visual sensor network (VSN) with wireless transceiving capability. The existing VSN design solutions under particular resource constrained scenarios are application-specific, whereas the degree of sensitivity of the resource constraints varies from one application to another. This limits the implementation of the existing energy efficient solutions within a VSN node, which may be considered to be a part of a heterogeneous network. This thesis aims to resolve the energy consumption issues faced within VSNs because of their resource constrained nature by proposing energy efficient solutions for sensing nodes characterisation. The heterogeneity of image capture and processing within a VSN can be adaptively reflected with a dynamic field-of-view (FoV) realisation. This is expected to allow the implementation of a generalised energy efficient solution that will adapt with the heterogeneity of the network. In this thesis, a FoV characterisation framework is proposed, which can assist design engineers during the pre-deployment phase in developing energy efficient VSNs. The proposed FoV characterisation framework provides efficient solutions for: 1) selecting suitable sensing range; 2) maximising spatial coverage; 3) minimising the number of required nodes; and 4) adaptive task classification. The task classification scheme proposed in this thesis exploits heterogeneity of the network and leads to an optimal distribution of tasks between visual sensing nodes. Soft decision criteria is exploited, and it is observed that for a given detection reliability, the proposed FoV characterisation framework provides energy efficient solutions which can be implemented within heterogeneous networks. In the post-deployment phase, the energy efficiency of a VSN for a given level of reliability can be enhanced by reconfiguring its nodes dynamically to achieve optimal configurations. Considering the dynamic realisation of quality-of-information (QoI), a strategy is devised for selecting suitable configurations of visual sensing nodes to reduce redundant visual content prior to transmission without sacrificing the expected information retrieval reliability. By incorporating QoI awareness using peak signal-to-noise ratio-based representative metric, the distributed nature of the proposed self-reconfiguration scheme accelerates the decision making process. This thesis also proposes a unified framework for node classification and dynamic self-reconfiguration in VSNs. For a given application, the unified framework provides a feasible solution to classify and reconfigure visual sensing nodes based on their FoV by exploiting the heterogeneity of targeted QoI within the sensing region. From the results, it is observed that for the second degree of heterogeneity in targeted QoI, the unified framework outperforms its existing counterparts and results in up to 72% energy savings with as low as 94% reliability. Within the context of resource constrained VSNs, the substantial energy savings achieved by the proposed unified framework can lead to network lifetime enhancement. Moreover, the reliability analysis demonstrates suitability of the unified framework for applications that need a desired level of QoI

    Network analysis and algorithm solutions in critical emergency scenarios

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    Critical emergency scenarios in network communication, mobile wireless sensor networks and Smart Grids. Network recovery after massive disruption, algorithms for damaged networks, protocols for damaged networks, progressive monitoring of a damaged network, progressive flow restoration of a damaged network. Analysis of the vulnerabilities of the deployment algorithm for Mobile Wireless Sensor Netowkrs in human hostile environment, Algorithms for Mobile Wireless Sensor Networks under attack. Analysis of the cascading failures phenomenon in the Smart Grids, Prevents Large Blackout in the Smart Grids, Reduce the energy demand on the Smart Grids using the Internet of Things

    Pertanika Journal of Science & Technology

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    Acta Cybernetica : Volume 25. Number 2.

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    Pertanika Journal of Science & Technology

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    Pertanika Journal of Science & Technology

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