5,119 research outputs found
Concepts and evolution of research in the field of wireless sensor networks
The field of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) is experiencing a resurgence of
interest and a continuous evolution in the scientific and industrial community.
The use of this particular type of ad hoc network is becoming increasingly
important in many contexts, regardless of geographical position and so,
according to a set of possible application. WSNs offer interesting low cost and
easily deployable solutions to perform a remote real time monitoring, target
tracking and recognition of physical phenomenon. The uses of these sensors
organized into a network continue to reveal a set of research questions
according to particularities target applications. Despite difficulties
introduced by sensor resources constraints, research contributions in this
field are growing day by day. In this paper, we present a comprehensive review
of most recent literature of WSNs and outline open research issues in this
field
A Fault-Tolerant Emergency-Aware Access Control Scheme for Cyber-Physical Systems
Access control is an issue of paramount importance in cyber-physical systems
(CPS). In this paper, an access control scheme, namely FEAC, is presented for
CPS. FEAC can not only provide the ability to control access to data in normal
situations, but also adaptively assign emergency-role and permissions to
specific subjects and inform subjects without explicit access requests to
handle emergency situations in a proactive manner. In FEAC, emergency-group and
emergency-dependency are introduced. Emergencies are processed in sequence
within the group and in parallel among groups. A priority and dependency model
called PD-AGM is used to select optimal response-action execution path aiming
to eliminate all emergencies that occurred within the system. Fault-tolerant
access control polices are used to address failure in emergency management. A
case study of the hospital medical care application shows the effectiveness of
FEAC
Fault-Tolerant Aggregation: Flow-Updating Meets Mass-Distribution
Flow-Updating (FU) is a fault-tolerant technique that has proved to be
efficient in practice for the distributed computation of aggregate functions in
communication networks where individual processors do not have access to global
information. Previous distributed aggregation protocols, based on repeated
sharing of input values (or mass) among processors, sometimes called
Mass-Distribution (MD) protocols, are not resilient to communication failures
(or message loss) because such failures yield a loss of mass. In this paper, we
present a protocol which we call Mass-Distribution with Flow-Updating (MDFU).
We obtain MDFU by applying FU techniques to classic MD. We analyze the
convergence time of MDFU showing that stochastic message loss produces low
overhead. This is the first convergence proof of an FU-based algorithm. We
evaluate MDFU experimentally, comparing it with previous MD and FU protocols,
and verifying the behavior predicted by the analysis. Finally, given that MDFU
incurs a fixed deviation proportional to the message-loss rate, we adjust the
accuracy of MDFU heuristically in a new protocol called MDFU with Linear
Prediction (MDFU-LP). The evaluation shows that both MDFU and MDFU-LP behave
very well in practice, even under high rates of message loss and even changing
the input values dynamically.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, To appear in OPODIS 201
Fault Discrimination in Wireless Sensor Networks
In current times, one of the promising and interesting areas of research is Wireless Sensor Networks. A Wireless Sensor Network consists of spatially distributed sensors to monitor environmental and physical conditions such as temperature, sound, pressure etc. It is built of nodes where each node is connected to one or more sensors. They are used for Medical applications, Security monitoring, Structural monitoring and Traffic monitoring etc. The number of sensor nodes in a Wireless Sensor Network can vary in the range of hundreds to thousands. In this project work we propose a distributed algorithm for detection of faults in a Wireless Sensor Network and to classify the faulty nodes. In our algorithm the sensor nodes are classified as being Fault Free, Transiently Faulty or Intermittently Faulty considering the energy differences from its neighbors in different rounds of the algorithm run. We have shown the simulation results in the form of the output messages from the nodes depicting their health and also compared the results in form of graphs for different average node degrees and different number of rounds of our algorithm run
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