6 research outputs found

    Topology design for time-varying networks

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    Traditional wireless networks seek to support end-to-end communication through either a single-hop wireless link to infrastructure or multi-hop wireless path to some destination. However, in some wireless networks (such as delay tolerant networks, or mobile social networks), due to sparse node distribution, node mobility, and time-varying network topology, end-to-end paths between the source and destination are not always available. In such networks, the lack of continuous connectivity, network partitioning, and long delays make design of network protocols very challenging. Previous DTN or time-varying network research mainly focuses on routing and information propagation. However, with large number of wireless devices' participation, and a lot of network functionality depends on the topology, how to maintain efficient and dynamic topology of a time-varying network becomes crucial. In this dissertation, I model a time-evolving network as a directed time-space graph which includes both spacial and temporal information of the network, then I study various topology control problems with such time-space graphs. First, I study the basic topology design problem where the links of the network are reliable. It aims to build a sparse structure from the original time-space graph such that (1) the network is still connected over time and/or supports efficient routing between any two nodes; (2) the total cost of the structure is minimized. I first prove that this problem is NP-hard, and then propose several greedy-based methods as solutions. Second, I further study a cost-efficient topology design problem, which not only requires the above two objective, but also guarantees that the spanning ratio of the topology is bounded by a given threshold. This problem is also NP-hard, and I give several greedy algorithms to solve it. Last, I consider a new topology design problem by relaxing the assumption of reliable links. Notice that in wireless networks the topologies are not quit predictable and the links are often unreliable. In this new model, each link has a probability to reflect its reliability. The new reliable topology design problem aims to build a sparse structure from the original space-time graph such that (1) for any pair of devices, there is a space-time path connecting them with the reliability larger than a required threshold; (2) the total cost of the structure is minimized. Several heuristics are proposed, which can significantly reduce the total cost of the topology while maintain the connectivity or reliability over time. Extensive simulations on both random networks and real-life tracing data have been conducted, and results demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed methods

    A COMMUNICATION FRAMEWORK FOR MULTIHOP WIRELESS ACCESS AND SENSOR NETWORKS: ANYCAST ROUTING & SIMULATION TOOLS

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    The reliance on wireless networks has grown tremendously within a number of varied application domains, prompting an evolution towards the use of heterogeneous multihop network architectures. We propose and analyze two communication frameworks for such networks. A first framework is designed for communications within multihop wireless access networks. The framework supports dynamic algorithms for locating access points using anycast routing with multiple metrics and balancing network load. The evaluation shows significant performance improvement over traditional solutions. A second framework is designed for communication within sensor networks and includes lightweight versions of our algorithms to fit the limitations of sensor networks. Analysis shows that this stripped down version can work almost equally well if tailored to the needs of a sensor network. We have also developed an extensive simulation environment using NS-2 to test realistic situations for the evaluations of our work. Our tools support analysis of realistic scenarios including the spreading of a forest fire within an area, and can easily be ported to other simulation software. Lastly, we us our algorithms and simulation environment to investigate sink movements optimization within sensor networks. Based on these results, we propose strategies, to be addressed in follow-on work, for building topology maps and finding optimal data collection points. Altogether, the communication framework and realistic simulation tools provide a complete communication and evaluation solution for access and sensor networks

    Telecommunications Networks

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    This book guides readers through the basics of rapidly emerging networks to more advanced concepts and future expectations of Telecommunications Networks. It identifies and examines the most pressing research issues in Telecommunications and it contains chapters written by leading researchers, academics and industry professionals. Telecommunications Networks - Current Status and Future Trends covers surveys of recent publications that investigate key areas of interest such as: IMS, eTOM, 3G/4G, optimization problems, modeling, simulation, quality of service, etc. This book, that is suitable for both PhD and master students, is organized into six sections: New Generation Networks, Quality of Services, Sensor Networks, Telecommunications, Traffic Engineering and Routing

    LIPIcs, Volume 248, ISAAC 2022, Complete Volume

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    LIPIcs, Volume 248, ISAAC 2022, Complete Volum

    Semantic discovery and reuse of business process patterns

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    Patterns currently play an important role in modern information systems (IS) development and their use has mainly been restricted to the design and implementation phases of the development lifecycle. Given the increasing significance of business modelling in IS development, patterns have the potential of providing a viable solution for promoting reusability of recurrent generalized models in the very early stages of development. As a statement of research-in-progress this paper focuses on business process patterns and proposes an initial methodological framework for the discovery and reuse of business process patterns within the IS development lifecycle. The framework borrows ideas from the domain engineering literature and proposes the use of semantics to drive both the discovery of patterns as well as their reuse
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