1,023 research outputs found

    Efficient self protection algorithms for static wireless sensor networks

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    Abstract—Wireless sensor networks have been widely used in many surveillance applications. Due to the importance of sensor nodes in such applications, certain level of protection needs to be provided to them. We study the self protection problem for static wireless sensor networks in this paper. Self protection problem focuses on using sensor nodes to provide protection to themselves instead of the target objects or certain target area, so that the sensor nodes can resist the attacks targeting on them directly. A wireless sensor network is p-self-protected, if for any wireless sensor there are at least p active sensors that can monitor it. The problem finding minimum p-self-protection is NP-complete and no efficient self protection algorithms have been proposed. In this paper, we provide efficient centralized and distributed algorithms with constant approximation ratio for minimum p-self-protection problem. In addition, we design efficient distributed algorithms to not only achieve p-self-protection but also maintain the connectivity of all active sensors. Our simulation confirms the performances of proposed algorithms. I

    Improved Approximation Algorithm for Minimum-Weight (1,m)(1,m)--Connected Dominating Set

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    The classical minimum connected dominating set (MinCDS) problem aims to find a minimum-size subset of connected nodes in a network such that every other node has at least one neighbor in the subset. This problem is drawing considerable attention in the field of wireless sensor networks because connected dominating sets can serve as virtual backbones of such networks. Considering fault-tolerance, researchers developed the minimum kk-connected mm-fold CDS (Min(k,m)(k,m)CDS) problem. Many studies have been conducted on MinCDSs, especially those in unit disk graphs. However, for the minimum-weight CDS (MinWCDS) problem in general graphs, algorithms with guaranteed approximation ratios are rare. Guha and Khuller designed a (1.35+ε)lnn(1.35+\varepsilon)\ln n-approximation algorithm for MinWCDS, where nn is the number of nodes. In this paper, we improved the approximation ratio to 2H(δmax+m1)2H(\delta_{\max}+m-1) for MinW(1,m)(1,m)CDS, where δmax\delta_{\max} is the maximum degree of the graph

    Connectivity, Coverage and Placement in Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Wireless communication between sensors allows the formation of flexible sensor networks, which can be deployed rapidly over wide or inaccessible areas. However, the need to gather data from all sensors in the network imposes constraints on the distances between sensors. This survey describes the state of the art in techniques for determining the minimum density and optimal locations of relay nodes and ordinary sensors to ensure connectivity, subject to various degrees of uncertainty in the locations of the nodes

    Unified Role Assignment Framework For Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Wireless sensor networks are made possible by the continuing improvements in embedded sensor, VLSI, and wireless radio technologies. Currently, one of the important challenges in sensor networks is the design of a systematic network management framework that allows localized and collaborative resource control uniformly across all application services such as sensing, monitoring, tracking, data aggregation, and routing. The research in wireless sensor networks is currently oriented toward a cross-layer network abstraction that supports appropriate fine or course grained resource controls for energy efficiency. In that regard, we have designed a unified role-based service paradigm for wireless sensor networks. We pursue this by first developing a Role-based Hierarchical Self-Organization (RBSHO) protocol that organizes a connected dominating set (CDS) of nodes called dominators. This is done by hierarchically selecting nodes that possess cumulatively high energy, connectivity, and sensing capabilities in their local neighborhood. The RBHSO protocol then assigns specific tasks such as sensing, coordination, and routing to appropriate dominators that end up playing a certain role in the network. Roles, though abstract and implicit, expose role-specific resource controls by way of role assignment and scheduling. Based on this concept, we have designed a Unified Role-Assignment Framework (URAF) to model application services as roles played by local in-network sensor nodes with sensor capabilities used as rules for role identification. The URAF abstracts domain specific role attributes by three models: the role energy model, the role execution time model, and the role service utility model. The framework then generalizes resource management for services by providing abstractions for controlling the composition of a service in terms of roles, its assignment, reassignment, and scheduling. To the best of our knowledge, a generic role-based framework that provides a simple and unified network management solution for wireless sensor networks has not been proposed previously
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