4,076 research outputs found

    Towards Spatial Queries over Phenomena in Sensor Networks

    Get PDF
    Today, technology developments enable inexpensive production and deployment of tiny sensing and computing nodes. Networked through wireless radio, such senor nodes form a new platform, wireless sensor networks, which provide novel ability to monitor spatiotemporally continuous phenomena. By treating a wireless sensor network as a database system, users can pose SQL-based queries over phenomena without needing to program detailed sensor node operations. DBMS-internally, intelligent and energyefficient data collection and processing algorithms have to be implemented to support spatial query processing over sensor networks. This dissertation proposes spatial query support for two views of continuous phenomena: field-based and object-based. A field-based view of continuous phenomena depicts them as a value distribution over a geographical area. However, due to the discrete and comparatively sparse distribution of sensor nodes, estimation methods are necessary to generate a field-based query result, and it has to be computed collaboratively ‘in-the-network’ due to energy constraints. This dissertation proposes SWOP, an in-network algorithm using Gaussian Kernel estimation. The key contribution is the use of a small number of Hermite coefficients to approximate the Gaussian Kernel function for sub-clustered sensor nodes, and processes the estimation result efficiently. An object-based view of continuous phenomena is interested in aspects such as the boundary of an ‘interesting region’ (e.g. toxic plume). This dissertation presents NED, which provides object boundary detection in sensor networks. NED encodes partial event estimation results based on confidence levels into optimized, variable length messages exchanged locally among neighboring sensor nodes to save communication cost. Therefore, sensor nodes detect objects and boundaries based on moving averages to eliminate noise effects and enhance detection quality. Furthermore, the dissertation proposes the SNAKE-based approach, which uses deformable curves to track the spatiotemporal changes of such objects incrementally in sensor networks. In the proposed algorithm, only neighboring nodes exchange messages to maintain the curve structures. Based on in-network tracking of deformable curves, other types of spatial and spatiotemporal properties of objects, such as area, can be provided by the sensor network. The experimental results proved that our approaches are resource friendly within the constrained sensor networks, while providing high quality query results

    Smart container monitoring using custom-made WSN technology : from business case to prototype

    Get PDF
    This paper reports on the development of a prototype solution for tracking and monitoring shipping containers. Deploying wireless sensor networks (WSNs) in an operational environment remains a challenging task. We strongly believe that standardized methodologies and tools could enhance future WSN deployments and enable rapid prototype development. Therefore, we choose to use a step-by-step approach where each step gives us more insight in the problem at hand while shielding some of the complexity of the final solution. We observed that environment emulation is of the utmost importance, especially for harsh wireless conditions inside a container stacking. This lead us to extend our test lab with wireless link emulation capabilities. It is also essential to assess feasibility of concepts and design choices after every stage during prototype development. This enabled us to create innovative WSN solutions, including a multi-MAC framework and a robust gateway selection algorithm

    SST: Integrated Fluorocarbon Microsensor System Using Catalytic Modification

    Get PDF
    Selective, sensitive, and reliable sensors are urgently needed to detect air-borne halogenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs). This broad class of compounds includes chlorine, fluorine, bromine, and iodine containing hydrocarbons used as solvents, refrigerants, herbicides, and more recently as chemical warfare agents (CWAs). It is important to be able to detect very low concentrations of halocarbon solvents and insecticides because of their acute health effects even in very low concentrations. For instance, the nerve agent sarin (isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate), first developed as an insecticide by German chemists in 1938, is so toxic that a ten minute exposure at an airborne concentration of only 65 parts per billion (ppb) can be fatal. Sarin became a household term when religious cult members on Tokyo subway trains poisoned over 5,500 people, killing 12. Sarin and other CWAs remain a significant threat to the health and safety of the general public. The goal of this project is to design a sensor system to detect and identify the composition and concentration of fluorinated VOCs. The system should be small, robust, compatible with metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) technology, cheap, if produced in large scale, and has the potential to be versatile in terms of low power consumption, detection of other gases, and integration in a portable system. The proposed VOC sensor system has three major elements that will be integrated into a microreactor flow cell: a temperature-programmable microhotplate array/reactor system which serves as the basic sensor platform; an innovative acoustic wave sensor, which detects material removal (instead of deposition) to verify and quantify the presence of fluorine; and an intelligent method, support vector machines, that will analyze the complex and high dimensional data furnished by the sensor system. The superior and complementary aspects of the three elements will be carefully integrated to create a system which is more sensitive and selective than other CWA detection systems that are commercially available or described in the research literature. While our sensor system will be developed to detect fluorinated VOCs, it can be adapted for other applications in which a target analyte can be catalytically converted for selective detection. Therefore, this investigation will examine the relationships between individual sensor element performance and joint sensor platform performance, integrated with state-of-the-art data analysis techniques. During development of the sensor system, the investigators will consider traditional reactor design concepts such as mass transfer and residence time effects, and will apply them to the emerging field of microsystems. The proposed research will provide the fundamental basis and understanding for examining multifunctional sensor platforms designed to provide extreme selectivity to targeted molecules. The project will involve interdisciplinary researchers and students and will connect to K-12 and RET programs for underrepresented students from rural areas

    Machine Learning in Wireless Sensor Networks: Algorithms, Strategies, and Applications

    Get PDF
    Wireless sensor networks monitor dynamic environments that change rapidly over time. This dynamic behavior is either caused by external factors or initiated by the system designers themselves. To adapt to such conditions, sensor networks often adopt machine learning techniques to eliminate the need for unnecessary redesign. Machine learning also inspires many practical solutions that maximize resource utilization and prolong the lifespan of the network. In this paper, we present an extensive literature review over the period 2002-2013 of machine learning methods that were used to address common issues in wireless sensor networks (WSNs). The advantages and disadvantages of each proposed algorithm are evaluated against the corresponding problem. We also provide a comparative guide to aid WSN designers in developing suitable machine learning solutions for their specific application challenges.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorial

    The design and implementation of fuzzy query processing on sensor networks

    Get PDF
    Sensor nodes and Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) enable observation of the physical world in unprecedented levels of granularity. A growing number of environmental monitoring applications are being designed to leverage data collection features of WSN, increasing the need for efficient data management techniques and for comparative analysis of various data management techniques. My research leverages aspects of fuzzy database, specifically fuzzy data representation and fuzzy or flexible queries to improve upon the efficiency of existing data management techniques by exploiting the inherent uncertainty of the data collected by WSN. Herein I present my research contributions. I provide classification of WSN middleware to illustrate varying approaches to data management for WSN and identify a need to better handle the uncertainty inherent in data collected from physical environments and to take advantage of the imprecision of the data to increase the efficiency of WSN by requiring less information be transmitted to adequately answer queries posed by WSN monitoring applications. In this dissertation, I present a novel approach to querying WSN, in which semantic knowledge about sensor attributes is represented as fuzzy terms. I present an enhanced simulation environment that supports more flexible and realistic analysis by using cellular automata models to separately model the deployed WSN and the underlying physical environment. Simulation experiments are used to evaluate my fuzzy query approach for environmental monitoring applications. My analysis shows that using fuzzy queries improves upon other data management techniques by reducing the amount of data that needs to be collected to accurately satisfy application requests. This reduction in data transmission results in increased battery life within sensors, an important measure of cost and performance for WSN applications

    Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks - OMCO NET

    Get PDF
    The mini conference “Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks” focuses on advanced methods for search and optimisation applied to wireless communication networks. It is sponsored by Research & Enterprise Fund Southampton Solent University. The conference strives to widen knowledge on advanced search methods capable of optimisation of wireless communications networks. The aim is to provide a forum for exchange of recent knowledge, new ideas and trends in this progressive and challenging area. The conference will popularise new successful approaches on resolving hard tasks such as minimisation of transmit power, cooperative and optimal routing

    Workshop sensing a changing world : proceedings workshop November 19-21, 2008

    Get PDF

    Generating Contour Maps for Dynamic Fields Monitored by Sensor Networks

    Get PDF
    Wireless sensor networks provide a new tool that enables researchers and scientists to efficiently monitor dynamic fields. In order to extend the lifetime of the network, it is important for us to minimize network data transmission as much as possible. Previous work proposed many useful aggregation techniques to answer max, min and average questions, and some of them have been employed in real applications. But we cannot get spatial information from these aggregation techniques. This thesis presents an efficient aggregation technique for continuous generation of contour maps for a dynamic field monitored by a wireless sensor network. A contour map is a useful data representation schema that provides an efficient way to visualize an approximation to the monitored field. In this thesis, we discuss an energy-efficient technique, which we call Isovector Aggregation, for generating such contours using an in-network approach. Our technique achieves energy efficiency in two principal ways. Firstly, only a selection of nodes close to contours are chosen to report, and each reported message contains information about a part or all of the contours, rather than any single node’s ID and value pair. Secondly, contours are progressively merged and simplified along the data routing tree, which eliminates many unnecessary contour points from contour vectors before they are transmitted back to the base station. Using Isovector Aggregation, the base station receives a complete representation of the contours that requires no further processing. Analysis shows that for region-related monitoring, Isovector Aggregation is the only technique that has O( n) traffic generation and that considers in-network traffic reduction at the same time. These two factors make Isovector Aggregation highly scalable. Experimental results using simulations also show that Isovector Aggregation involves considerably less data transmission compared to other approaches, such as the no-aggregation approach and the Isolines Aggregation technique, without compromising the accuracy of representations of the baseline maps
    • 

    corecore