15 research outputs found

    An Internet of Things Based Bed-Egress Alerting Paradigm Using Wearable Sensors in Elderly Care Environment

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    The lack of healthcare staff and increasing proportions of elderly population is alarming. The traditional means to look after elderly has resulted in 255,000 reported falls (only within UK). This not only resulted in extensive aftercare needs and surgeries (summing up to £4.4 billion) but also in added suffering and increased mortality. In such circumstances, the technology can greatly assist by offering automated solutions for the problem at hand. The proposed work offers an Internet of things (IoT) based patient bed-exit monitoring system in clinical settings, capable of generating a timely response to alert the healthcare workers and elderly by analyzing the wireless data streams, acquired through wearable sensors. This work analyzes two different datasets obtained from divergent families of sensing technologies, i.e., smartphone-based accelerometer and radio frequency identification (RFID) based accelerometer. The findings of the proposed system show good efficacy in monitoring the bed-exit and discriminate other ambulating activities. Furthermore, the proposed work manages to keep the average end-to-end system delay (i.e., communications of sensed data to Data Sink (DS)/Control Center (CC) + machine-based feature extraction and class identification + feedback communications to a relevant healthcare worker/elderly) below 1 10 th of a second

    DISTRIBUTED CONGESTION-A WARE TRAFFIC LOAD BALANCING SCHEMES FOR ROUTING IN WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS

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    Efficient routing m Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) plays an important role in enhancing the performance of the network. The data traffic generated by the sensing nodes in WSN usually follows the shortest discovered route between the source and the sink

    DISTRIBUTED CONGESTION-A WARE TRAFFIC LOAD BALANCING SCHEMES FOR ROUTING IN WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS

    No full text
    Efficient routing m Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) plays an important role in enhancing the performance of the network. The data traffic generated by the sensing nodes in WSN usually follows the shortest discovered route between the source and the sink

    Congestion Detection and Alleviation in Multihop Wireless Sensor Networks

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    Multiple traffic flows in a dense environment of a mono-sink wireless sensor network (WSN) experience congestion that leads to excessive energy consumption and severe packet loss. To address this problem, a Congestion Detection and Alleviation (CDA) mechanism has been proposed. CDA exploits the features and the characteristics of the sensor nodes and the wireless links between them to detect and alleviate node- and link-level congestion. Node-level congestion is detected by examining the buffer utilisation and the interval between the consecutive data packets. However, link-level congestion is detected through a novel procedure by determining link utilisation using back-off stage of Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA). CDA alleviates congestion reactively by either rerouting the data traffic to a new less congested, more energy-efficient route or bypassing the affected node/link through ripple-based search. The simulation analysis performed in ns-2.35 evaluates CDA with Congestion Avoidance through Fairness (CAF) and with No Congestion Control (NOCC) protocols. The analysis shows that CDA improves packet delivery ratio by 33% as compared to CAF and 54% as compared to NOCC. CDA also shows an improvement in throughput by 16% as compared to CAF and 36% as compared to NOCC. Additionally, it reduces End-To-End delay by 17% as compared to CAF and 38% as compared to NOCC

    SWIPT-Assisted Energy Efficiency Optimization in 5G/B5G Cooperative IoT Network

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    Resource use in point-to-point and point-to-multipoint communication emerges with the tremendous growth in wireless communication technologies. One of the technologies is wireless power transfer which may be used to provide sufficient resources for energy-constrained networks. With the implication of cooperative communication in 5G/B5G and the Internet of Things (IoT), simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT)-assisted energy efficiency and appropriate resource use become challenging tasks. In this paper, multiple IoT-enabled devices are deployed to cooperate with the source node through intermediate/relay nodes powered by radio-frequency (RF) energy. The relay forwards the desired information generated by the source node to the IoT devices with the fusion of decode/amplify processes and charges itself at the same time through energy harvesting technology. In this regard, a problem with throughput, energy efficiency, and joint throughput with user admission maximization is formulated while assuring the useful, practical network constraints, which contemplate the upper/lower bounds of power transmitted by the source node, channel condition, and energy harvesting. The formulated problem is a mixed-integer non-linear problem (MINLP). To solve the formulated problem, the rate of individual IoT-enabled devices (b/s), number of selected IoT devices, and the sum-rate maximization are prosecuted for no-cooperation, cooperation with diversity, and cooperation without diversity. Moreover, a comparison of the outer approximation algorithm (OAA) and mesh adaptive direct search algorithm (MADS) for non-linear optimization with the exhaustive search algorithm is provided. The results with reference to the complexity of the algorithms have also been evaluated which show that 4.68×10−10 OAA and 7.81×10−11 MADS as a percent of ESA, respectively. Numerous simulations are carried out to exhibit the usefulness of the analysis to achieve the convergence to ε-optimal solution

    A Driver Safety Information Broadcast Protocol for VANET

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    Due to the highly mobile nature of VANET, especially on highways, a reliable and fast penetration of emergency messages is required so that in-time decisions can be performed. A broadcast routing protocol can perform flooding in sparse network but it will suffer from high control overhead, higher delay and lower packet delivery ratio in dense environment. Since, a significant number of VANET messages including neighbour discovery, safety, destination discovery, location and service advertisements is broadcast, therefore, the area of broadcast routing is important and needs careful design considerations. In this article, we propose ZoomOut Broadcast Routing Protocol for driver safety information dissemination in VANET. In ZBRP, 1-hop neighbour discovery messages are used in an intelligent way based on the speed and inter-vehicle distance of 1-hop neighbours to select a front and a behind vehicle. A neighbour from the front area is called front relative while the neighbour from behind area is called behind relative. During the processing of multi-hop safety messages, only a front or a behind relative rebroadcasts a safety message whereas non-relatives drop it. ZBRP is compared with G-AODV, PGB and DV-CAST through ns-2 simulations. The results show that ZBRP performs better than the stated protocols in terms of network penetration time, packet delivery and broadcast suppression

    An Emergency Response System: Construction, Validation, and Experiments for Disaster Management in a Vehicular Environment

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    Natural disasters and catastrophes not only cost the loss of human lives, but adversely affect the progress toward sustainable development of the country. As soon as disaster strikes, the first and foremost challenge for the concerned authorities is to make an expeditious response. Consequently, they need to be highly-organized, properly-trained, and sufficiently-equipped to effectively respond and limit the destructive effects of a disaster. In such circumstances, communication plays a vital role, whereby the consequences of tasks assigned to the workers for rescue and relief services may be streamlined by relaying necessary information among themselves. Moreover, most of the infrastructure is either severely damaged or completely destroyed in post-disaster scenarios; therefore, a Vehicular Ad Hoc Network (VANET) is used to carry out the rescue operation, as it does not require any pre-existing infrastructure. In this context, the current work proposes and validates an effective way to relay the crucial information through the development of an application and the deployment of an experimental TestBed in a vehicular environment. The TestBed may able to provide a way to design and validate the algorithms. It provides a number of vehicles with onboard units embedded with a credit-card-size microcomputer called Raspberry Pi and a Global Positioning System (GPS) module. Additionally, it dispatches one of the pre-defined codes of emergency messages based on the level of urgency through multiple hops to a central control room. Depending on the message code received from a client, the server takes appropriate action. Furthermore, the solution also provides a graphical interface that is easy to interpret and to understand at the control room to visualize the rescue operation on the fly
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