3 research outputs found
Routing in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks using Social Tie Strengths and Mobility Plans
We consider the problem of routing in a mobile ad-hoc network (MANET) for
which the planned mobilities of the nodes are partially known a priori and the
nodes travel in groups. This situation arises commonly in military and
emergency response scenarios. Optimal routes are computed using the most
reliable path principle in which the negative logarithm of a node pair's
adjacency probability is used as a link weight metric. This probability is
estimated using the mobility plan as well as dynamic information captured by
table exchanges, including a measure of the social tie strength between nodes.
The latter information is useful when nodes deviate from their plans or when
the plans are inaccurate. We compare the proposed routing algorithm with the
commonly-used optimized link state routing (OLSR) protocol in ns-3 simulations.
As the OLSR protocol does not exploit the mobility plans, it relies on link
state determination which suffers with increasing mobility. Our simulations
show considerably better throughput performance with the proposed approach as
compared with OLSR at the expense of increased overhead. However, in the
high-throughput regime, the proposed approach outperforms OLSR in terms of both
throughput and overhead