686 research outputs found

    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

    Fault-tolerant wireless sensor networks using evolutionary games

    Get PDF
    This dissertation proposes an approach to creating robust communication systems in wireless sensor networks, inspired by biological and ecological systems, particularly by evolutionary game theory. In this approach, a virtual community of agents live inside the network nodes and carry out network functions. The agents use different strategies to execute their functions, and these strategies are tested and selected by playing evolutionary games. Over time, agents with the best strategies survive, while others die. The strategies and the game rules provide the network with an adaptive behavior that allows it to react to changes in environmental conditions by adapting and improving network behavior. To evaluate the viability of this approach, this dissertation also describes a micro-component framework for implementing agent-based wireless sensor network services, an evolutionary data collection protocol built using this framework, ECP, and experiments evaluating the performance of this protocol in a faulty environment. The framework addresses many of the programming challenges in writing network software for wireless sensor networks, while the protocol built using the framework provides a means of evaluating the general viability of the agent-based approach. The results of this evaluation show that an evolutionary approach to designing wireless sensor networks can improve the performance of wireless sensor network protocols in the presence of node failures. In particular, we compared the performance of ECP with a non-evolutionary rule-based variant of ECP. While the purely-evolutionary version of ECP has more routing timeouts than the rule-based approach in failure-free networks, it sends significantly fewer beacon packets and incurs statistically fewer routing timeouts in both simple fault and periodic fault scenarios

    Proactive Highly Ambulatory Sensor Routing (PHASeR) protocol for mobile wireless sensor networks

    Get PDF
    This paper presents a novel multihop routing protocol for mobile wireless sensor networks called PHASeR (Proactive Highly Ambulatory Sensor Routing). The proposed protocol uses a simple hop-count metric to enable the dynamic and robust routing of data towards the sink in mobile environments. It is motivated by the application of radiation mapping by unmanned vehicles, which requires the reliable and timely delivery of regular measurements to the sink. PHASeR maintains a gradient metric in mobile environments by using a global TDMA MAC layer. It also uses the technique of blind forwarding to pass messages through the network in a multipath manner. PHASeR is analysed mathematically based on packet delivery ratio, average packet delay, throughput and overhead. It is then simulated with varying mobility, scalability and traffic loads. The protocol gives good results over all measures, which suggests that it may also be suitable for a wider array of emerging applications

    Exploitation of Data Correlation and Performance Enhancement in Wireless Sensor Networks

    Get PDF
    With the combination of wireless communications and embedded system, lots of progress has been made in the area of wireless sensor networks (WSNs). The networks have already been widely deployed, due to their self-organization capacity and low-cost advantage. However, there are still some technical challenges needed to be addressed. In the thesis, three algorithms are proposed in improving network energy efficiency, detecting data fault and reducing data redundancy. The basic principle behind the proposed algorithms is correlation in the data collected by WSNs. The first sensor scheduling algorithm is based on the spatial correlation between neighbor sensor readings. Given the spatial correlation, sensor nodes are clustered into groups. At each time instance, only one node within each group works as group representative, namely, sensing and transmitting sensor data. Sensor nodes take turns to be group representative. Therefore, the energy consumed by other sensor nodes within the same group can be saved. Due to the continuous nature of the data to be collected, temporal and spatial correlation of sensor data has been exploited to detect the faulty data. By exploitation of temporal correlation, the normal range of upcoming sensor data can be predicted by the historical observations. Based on spatial correlation, weighted neighbor voting can be used to diagnose whether the value of sensor data is reliable. The status of the sensor data, normal or faulty, is decided by the combination of these two proposed detection procedures. Similar to the sensor scheduling algorithm, the recursive principal component analysis (RPCA) based algorithm has been studied to detect faulty data and aggregate redundant data by exploitation of spatial correlation as well. The R-PCA model is used to process the sensor data, with the help of squared prediction error (SPE) score and cumulative percentage formula. When SPE score of a collected datum is distinctly larger than that of normal data, faults can be detected. The data dimension is reduced according to the calculation result of cumulative percentage formula. All the algorithms are simulated in OPNET or MATLAB based on practical and synthetic datasets. Performances of the proposed algorithms are evaluated in each chapter

    On the use of IEEE 802.15.4/ZigBee as federating communication protocols for Wireless Sensor Networks

    Get PDF
    Tese de mestrado. Redes e Serviços de Comunicação. Faculdade de Engenharia. Universidade do Porto, Instituto Superior de Engenharia. 200

    Practical Aggregation in the Edge

    Get PDF
    Due to the increasing amounts of data produced by applications and devices, cloud infrastructures are becoming unable to timely process and provide answers back to users. This has led to the emergence of the edge computing paradigm that aims at moving computations closer to end user devices. Edge computing can be defined as performing computations outside the boundaries of cloud data centres. This however, can be materialised across very different scenarios considering the broad spectrum of devices that can be leveraged to perform computations in the edge. In this thesis, we focus on a concrete scenario of edge computing, that of multiple devices with wireless capabilities that collectively form a wireless ad hoc network to perform distributed computations. We aim at devising practical solutions for these scenarios however, there is a lack of tools to help us in achieving such goal. To address this first limitation we propose a novel framework, called Yggdrasil, that is specifically tailored to develop and execute distributed protocols over wireless ad hoc networks on commodity devices. As to enable distributed computations in such networks, we focus on the particular case of distributed data aggregation. In particular, we address a harder variant of this problem, that we dub distributed continuous aggregation, where input values used for the computation of the aggregation function may change over time, and propose a novel distributed continuous aggregation protocol, called MiRAge. We have implemented and validated both Yggdrasil and MiRAge through an extensive experimental evaluation using a test-bed composed of 24 Raspberry Pi’s. Our results show that Yggdrasil provides adequate abstractions and tools to implement and execute distributed protocols in wireless ad hoc settings. Our evaluation is also composed of a practical comparative study on distributed continuous aggregation protocols, that shows that MiRAge is more robust and achieves more precise aggregation results than competing state-of-the-art alternatives

    A self-healing framework for WSNs : detection and recovery of faulty sensor nodes and unreliable wireless links

    Get PDF
    Proponemos un marco conceptual para acoplar técnicas de auto-organización y técnicas de autocuración. A este marco se le llama de auto-curación y es capaz de hacer frente a enlaces inalámbricos inestables y nodos defectuosos. Dividimos el marco en dos componentes principales: la auto-organización y auto-curación. En el componente de auto-organización, nosotros construimos una topología de árbol que determine las rutas hacia el sumidero. En el componente de auto-curación, la topología del árbol se adapta a ambos tipos de fallas siguiendo tres pasos: recopilación de información, detección de fallas, y la recuperación de fallos. En el paso de recopilación de información, los nodos determinan el estado actual de la red mediante la recopilación de información de la capa MAC. En el paso de detección de fallas, los nodos analizan la información recopilada y detectan nodos/enlaces defectuosos. En el paso de recuperación de fallos, los nodos recuperan la topología del árbol mediante la sustitución de componentes defectuosos con redundantes (es decir, componentes de respaldo). Este marco permite una red con resiliencia que se recupera sin agotar los recursos de la red.We propose a conceptual framework for putting together self-organizing and self-healing techniques. This framework is called the self-healing framework and it is capable of coping with unstable wireless links and faulty nodes. We divide the framework into two major components: selforganization and self-healing. In the self-organization component, we build a tree topology that determines routing paths towards the sink. In the self-healing component, the tree topology copes with both types of failures by following three steps: information collection, fault detection, and fault recovery. In the information collection step, the nodes determine the current status of the network by gathering information from the MAC layer. In the fault detection step, the nodes analyze the collected information and detect faulty nodes/links. In the fault recovery step, the nodes recover the tree topology by replacing the faulty components with redundant ones (i.e., backup components). This framework allows a resilient network that recovers itself without depleting the network resources.Doctor en IngenieríaDoctorad

    DESIGN OF MOBILE DATA COLLECTOR BASED CLUSTERING ROUTING PROTOCOL FOR WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS

    Get PDF
    Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) consisting of hundreds or even thousands of nodes, canbe used for a multitude of applications such as warfare intelligence or to monitor the environment. A typical WSN node has a limited and usually an irreplaceable power source and the efficient use of the available power is of utmost importance to ensure maximum lifetime of eachWSNapplication. Each of the nodes needs to transmit and communicate sensed data to an aggregation point for use by higher layer systems. Data and message transmission among nodes collectively consume the largest amount of energy available in WSNs. The network routing protocols ensure that every message reaches thedestination and has a direct impact on the amount of transmissions to deliver messages successfully. To this end, the transmission protocol within the WSNs should be scalable, adaptable and optimized to consume the least possible amount of energy to suite different network architectures and application domains. The inclusion of mobile nodes in the WSNs deployment proves to be detrimental to protocol performance in terms of nodes energy efficiency and reliable message delivery. This thesis which proposes a novel Mobile Data Collector based clustering routing protocol for WSNs is designed that combines cluster based hierarchical architecture and utilizes three-tier multi-hop routing strategy between cluster heads to base station by the help of Mobile Data Collector (MDC) for inter-cluster communication. In addition, a Mobile Data Collector based routing protocol is compared with Low Energy Adaptive Clustering Hierarchy and A Novel Application Specific Network Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks routing protocol. The protocol is designed with the following in mind: minimize the energy consumption of sensor nodes, resolve communication holes issues, maintain data reliability, finally reach tradeoff between energy efficiency and latency in terms of End-to-End, and channel access delays. Simulation results have shown that the Mobile Data Collector based clustering routing protocol for WSNs could be easily implemented in environmental applications where energy efficiency of sensor nodes, network lifetime and data reliability are major concerns
    corecore