909 research outputs found

    Topology-based broadcast schemes for urban scenarios targeting adverse density conditions

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    © 2014 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works[EN] Research works regarding vehicular communications usually obviate assessing the proposals in scenarios including adverse vehicle densities, despite such scenarios are quite common in real urban environments. In this paper, we study the effect of these hostile conditions on the performance of different schemes providing warning message dissemination. We then propose the Junction Store and Forward (JSF) and the Nearest Junction Located (NJL) schemes, which were specially designed to be used in very low and very high density scenarios, respectively. Simulation results using real maps demonstrate how our proposed schemes are able to outperform existing warning message dissemination schemes in urban environments under adverse vehicle density conditions.This work was partially supported by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion´ , Spain, under Grant TIN2011-27543- C03-01, as well as the Government of Arag ´on and the European Social Fund (T91 Research Group).Sanguesa, JA.; Fogue, M.; Garrido, P.; Martínez, FJ.; Cano Escribá, JC.; Tavares De Araujo Cesariny Calafate, CM. (2014). Topology-based broadcast schemes for urban scenarios targeting adverse density conditions. En 2014 IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC). IEEE. 2564-2569. doi:10.1109/WCNC.2014.6952786S2564256

    Adaptive Mechanisms to Improve Message Dissemination in Vehicular Networks

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    En el pasado, se han dedicado muchos recursos en construir mejores carreteras y autovías. Con el paso del tiempo, los objetivos fueron cambiando hacia las mejoras de los vehículos, consiguiendo cada vez vehículos más rápidos y con mayor autonomía. Más tarde, con la introducción de la electrónica en el mercado del automóvil, los vehículos fueron equipados con sensores, equipos de comunicaciones, y otros avances tecnológicos que han permitido la aparición de coches más eficientes, seguros y confortables. Las aplicaciones que nos permite el uso de las Redes Vehiculares (VNs) en términos de seguridad y eficiencia son múltiples, lo que justifica la cantidad y recursos de investigación que se están dedicando en los últimos años. En el desarrollo de esta Tesis, los esfuerzos se han centrado en el área de las Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks, una subclase de las Redes Vehiculares que se centra en las comunicaciones entre los vehículos, sin necesidad de que existan elementos de infraestructura. Con la intención de mejorar el proceso de diseminación de mensajes de alerta, imprescindibles para las aplicaciones relacionadas con la seguridad, se ha propuesto un esquema de difusión adaptativo, capaz de seleccionar automáticamente el mecanismo de difusión óptimo en función de la complejidad del mapa y de la densidad actual de vehículos. El principal objetivo es maximizar la efectividad en la difusión de mensajes, reduciendo al máximo el número de mensajes necesarios, evitando o mitigando las tormentas de difusión. Las propuestas actuales en el área de las VANETs, se centran principalmente en analizar escenarios con densidades típicas o promedio. Sin embargo, y debido a las características de este tipo de redes, a menudo se dan situaciones con densidades extremas (altas y bajas). Teniendo en cuenta los problemas que pueden ocasionar en el proceso de diseminación de los mensajes de emergencia, se han propuesto dos nuevos esquemas de difusión para bajas densidades: el \emph{Junction Store and Forward} (JSF) y el \emph{Neighbor Store and Forward} (NSF). Además, para situaciones de alta densidad de vehículos, se ha diseñado el \emph{Nearest Junction Located} (NJL), un esquema de diseminación que reduce notablemente el número de mensajes enviados, sin por ello perder prestaciones. Finalmente, hemos realizado una clasificacion de los esquemas de difusión para VANETs más importantes, analizando las características utilizadas en su diseño. Además hemos realizado una comparación de todos ellos, utilizando el mismo entorno de simulación y los mismos escenarios, permitiendo conocer cuál es el mejor esquema de diseminación a usar en cada momento

    Game-theoretical design of an adaptive distributed dissemination protocol for VANETs

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    Road safety applications envisaged for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks (VANETs) depend largely on the dissemination of warning messages to deliver information to concerned vehicles. The intended applications, as well as some inherent VANET characteristics, make data dissemination an essential service and a challenging task in this kind of networks. This work lays out a decentralized stochastic solution for the data dissemination problem through two game-theoretical mechanisms. Given the non-stationarity induced by a highly dynamic topology, diverse network densities, and intermittent connectivity, a solution for the formulated game requires an adaptive procedure able to exploit the environment changes. Extensive simulations reveal that our proposal excels in terms of number of transmissions, lower end-to-end delay and reduced overhead while maintaining high delivery ratio, compared to other proposalsPeer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    A SURVEY ON TOPOLOGY-BASED MESSAGE BROADCAST SCHEMES IN VEHICULAR NETWORKS

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    Vehicular ad-hoc networks (VANETs) are subclass of mobile ad-hoc networks (MANETs). They have been the most promising research field and development for the last few years. VANETs use vehicles as mobile nodes to provide communication among nearby vehicles and between vehicles and nearby roadside equipment. VANETs come with several challenging characteristics, such as dynamic and potentially large scale network topology, high mobility and intermittent connectivity of vehicular nodes, and broadcasting as the predominant communication to disseminate the safety messages. When a traffic accident happens, the safety message should be broadcasted to all vehicles in the area exposed to potential hazard. Recently, there have been a significant number of broadcasting protocols for VANETs reported in the literature. In this survey paper we provide an overview of topology-based broadcasting protocols and associated requirements, along with challenges and their proposed current and past major solutions. In addition, classification and comparison of topology-based broadcasting protocols are described from their pros and cons. Featured solutions in this domain are categorized and discussed

    A Survey and Comparative Study of Broadcast Warning Message Dissemination Schemes for VANETs

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    © 2016 Julio A. Sanguesa et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications also known as vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs) allow vehicles to cooperate to increase driving efficiency and safety on the roads. In particular, they are forecasted as one of the key technologies to increase traffic safety by providing useful traffic services. In this scope, vehicle-to-vehicle dissemination of warning messages to alert nearby vehicles is one of the most significant and representative solutions. The main goal of the different dissemination strategies available is to reduce the message delivery latency of such information while ensuring the correct reception of warning messages in the vehicle's neighborhood as soon as a dangerous situation occurs. Despite the fact that several dissemination schemes have been proposed so far, their evaluation has been done under different conditions, using different simulators, making it difficult to determine the optimal dissemination scheme for each particular scenario. In this paper, besides reviewing the most relevant broadcast dissemination schemes available in the recent literature, we also provide a fair comparative analysis by evaluating them under the same environmental conditions, focusing on the same metrics, and using the same simulation platform. Overall, we provide researchers with a clear guideline of the benefits and drawbacks associated with each scheme.This work was partially supported by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Programa Estatal de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad, Proyectos I+D+I 2014, Spain, under Grant TEC2014-52690-R, and by the Government of Aragon and the European Social Fund (T91 Research Group).Sangüesa-Escorihuela, JA.; Fogue, M.; Garrido, P.; Martinez Dominguez, FJ.; Cano Escribá, JC.; Tavares De Araujo Cesariny Calafate, CM. (2016). A Survey and Comparative Study of Broadcast Warning Message Dissemination Schemes for VANETs. Mobile Information Systems. 2016:1-18. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/8714142S118201

    Named Data Networking in Vehicular Ad hoc Networks: State-of-the-Art and Challenges

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    International audienceInformation-Centric Networking (ICN) has been proposed as one of the future Internet architectures. It is poised to address the challenges faced by today's Internet that include, but not limited to, scalability, addressing, security, and privacy. Furthermore, it also aims at meeting the requirements for new emerging Internet applications. To realize ICN, Named Data Networking (NDN) is one of the recent implementations of ICN that provides a suitable communication approach due to its clean slate design and simple communication model. There are a plethora of applications realized through ICN in different domains where data is the focal point of communication. One such domain is Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) realized through Vehicular Ad hoc NETwork (VANET) where vehicles exchange information and content with each other and with the infrastructure. To date, excellent research results have been yielded in the VANET domain aiming at safe, reliable, and infotainment-rich driving experience. However, due to the dynamic topologies, host-centric model, and ephemeral nature of vehicular communication, various challenges are faced by VANET that hinder the realization of successful vehicular networks and adversely affect the data dissemination, content delivery, and user experiences. To fill these gaps, NDN has been extensively used as underlying communication paradigm for VANET. Inspired by the extensive research results in NDN-based VANET, in this paper, we provide a detailed and systematic review of NDN-driven VANET. More precisely, we investigate the role of NDN in VANET and discuss the feasibility of NDN architecture in VANET environment. Subsequently, we cover in detail, NDN-based naming, routing and forwarding, caching, mobility, and security mechanism for VANET. Furthermore, we discuss the existing standards, solutions, and simulation tools used in NDN-based VANET. Finally, we also identify open challenges and issues faced by NDN-driven VANET and highlight future research directions that should be addressed by the research community

    Improving Vehicular ad hoc Network Protocols to Support Safety Applications in Realistic Scenarios

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    La convergencia de las telecomunicaciones, la informática, la tecnología inalámbrica y los sistemas de transporte, va a facilitar que nuestras carreteras y autopistas nos sirvan tanto como plataforma de transporte, como de comunicaciones. Estos cambios van a revolucionar completamente cómo y cuándo vamos a acceder a determinados servicios, comunicarnos, viajar, entretenernos, y navegar, en un futuro muy cercano. Las redes vehiculares ad hoc (vehicular ad hoc networks VANETs) son redes de comunicación inalámbricas que no requieren de ningún tipo de infraestructura, y que permiten la comunicación y conducción cooperativa entre los vehículos en la carretera. Los vehículos actúan como nodos de comunicación y transmisores, formando redes dinámicas junto a otros vehículos cercanos en entornos urbanos y autopistas. Las características especiales de las redes vehiculares favorecen el desarrollo de servicios y aplicaciones atractivas y desafiantes. En esta tesis nos centramos en las aplicaciones relacionadas con la seguridad. Específicamente, desarrollamos y evaluamos un novedoso protocol que mejora la seguridad en las carreteras. Nuestra propuesta combina el uso de información de la localización de los vehículos y las características del mapa del escenario, para mejorar la diseminación de los mensajes de alerta. En las aplicaciones de seguridad para redes vehiculares, nuestra propuesta permite reducir el problema de las tormentas de difusión, mientras que se mantiene una alta efectividad en la diseminación de los mensajes hacia los vehículos cercanos. Debido a que desplegar y evaluar redes VANET supone un gran coste y una tarea dura, la metodología basada en la simulación se muestra como una metodología alternativa a la implementación real. A diferencia de otros trabajos previos, con el fin de evaluar nuestra propuesta en un entorno realista, en nuestras simulaciones tenemos muy en cuenta tanto la movilidad de los vehículos, como la transmisión de radio en entornos urbanos, especialmente cuando los edificios interfieren en la propagación de la señal de radio. Con este propósito, desarrollamos herramientas para la simulación de VANETs más precisas y realistas, mejorando tanto la modelización de la propagación de radio, como la movilidad de los vehículos, obteniendo una solución que permite integrar mapas reales en el entorno de simulación. Finalmente, evaluamos las prestaciones de nuestro protocolo propuesto haciendo uso de nuestra plataforma de simulación mejorada, evidenciando la importancia del uso de un entorno de simulación adecuado para conseguir resultados más realistas y poder obtener conclusiones más significativas.Martínez Domínguez, FJ. (2010). Improving Vehicular ad hoc Network Protocols to Support Safety Applications in Realistic Scenarios [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/9195Palanci

    Enhancing the 3GPP V2X architecture with information-centric networking

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    Vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communications allow a vehicle to interact with other vehicles and with communication parties in its vicinity (e.g., road-side units, pedestrian users, etc.) with the primary goal of making the driving and traveling experience safer, smarter and more comfortable. A wide set of V2X-tailored specifications have been identified by the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) with focus on the design of architecture enhancements and a flexible air interface to ensure ultra-low latency, highly reliable and high-throughput connectivity as the ultimate aim. This paper discusses the potential of leveraging Information-Centric Networking (ICN) principles in the 3GPP architecture for V2X communications. We consider Named Data Networking (NDN) as reference ICN architecture and elaborate on the specific design aspects, required changes and enhancements in the 3GPP V2X architecture to enable NDN-based data exchange as an alternative/complementary solution to traditional IP networking, which barely matches the dynamics of vehicular environments. Results are provided to showcase the performance improvements of the NDN-based proposal in disseminating content requests over the cellular network against a traditional networking solution119sem informaçãosem informaçã
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