Geometric Aspects and Random Delays in Probabilistic Broadcasting for Wireless Ad Hoc Networks


Book Description

This thesis addresses the problem of disseminating broadcast packets in a multi-hop Wireless ad hoc network. Specifically, it focuses on broadcasting protocols in which nodes make probabilistic decisions to forward packets. In connected multi-hop ad hoc networks, this type of protocol produces a broadcasting process that saves energy and bandwidth while offering a natural rotation of the subset of forwarders over time, yet it entails mínimum overhead. Most of the literature addresses the challenge of estimating the values of the forwarding probability of nodes (pf) that reduce the size of the subset of forwarders (saved rebroadcast) and maintain broadcast packets reaching most nodes (reachability). This thesis provides an analysis of new factors, other than the estimation of pf, that also inuence the reachability and saved rebroadcast of probabilistic protocols, namely the layout of nodes (i.e. the geometry of node position) and the parameters of the random delays used in the broadcast protocols...







Probabilistic Broadcasting in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks


Book Description

Broadcasting as mentioned in the introduction of the chapter is a very essential operation in wireless ad hoc networks. It helps not just in route discovery but also in emergency conditions. Because of the constraints that the network being wireless and ad hoc at the same time, puts forward, finding an optimum solution is a challenge. Bringing in uncertainity into the system would be one way of optimizing the broadcasting operation. A more effective way to use this probabilistic broadcasting operation is to introduce some intelligence into the system. Intelligence in the form of neighborhood information, tranmission ranges would be very useful. In particular, if the network is very sparse it would make sense to use higher value of broadcast probability and vice versa. This idea has been explored in (Zhang & Agrawal, 2005). Another way to optimize the broadcasting operation is by ensuring that instead of having a common optimum tranmission range a variable tranmission range (Member-Gomez & Member-Campbell, 2007) could be used to increase the capacity (Gupta & Kumar, 2000) of the network.




Theoretical Aspects of Distributed Computing in Sensor Networks


Book Description

Wireless ad hoc sensor networks has recently become a very active research subject. Achieving efficient, fault-tolerant realizations of very large, highly dynamic, complex, unconventional networks is a real challenge for abstract modelling, algorithmic design and analysis, but a solid foundational and theoretical background seems to be lacking. This book presents high-quality contributions by leading experts worldwide on the key algorithmic and complexity-theoretic aspects of wireless sensor networks. The intended audience includes researchers and graduate students working on sensor networks, and the broader areas of wireless networking and distributed computing, as well as practitioners in the relevant application areas. The book can also serve as a text for advanced courses and seminars.




Hybrid Probabilistic Broadcast Schemes for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks


Book Description

Broadcasting is one of the fundamental data dissemination mechanisms in mobile ad hoc network (MANET), which is, for instance, extensively used in many routing protocols for route discovery process. The dynamic topology and limitedcommunication bandwidth of such networks pose a number of challenges in designing an efficient broadcasting scheme for MANETs. The simplest approach is flooding, where each node retransmit every unique received packet exactly onceon each outgoing link. Although flooding ensures that broadcast packet is received by all network nodes, it generates many redundant transmissions which can trigger high transmission collision and contention in the network, aphenomenon referred to as the broadcast storm. Several probabilistic broadcast algorithms have been proposed that incur low communication overhead to mitigate the broadcast storm problem and tend to show superior adaptability in changing environments when compared todeterministic (i.e., non-probabilistic) schemes. However, most of these schemes reduce redundant broadcasts at the expense of reachability, a requirement for near-global network topological information or support from additionalhardware. This research argues that broadcast schemes that combine the important features of fixed probabilistic and counter-based schemes can reduce the broadcast storm problem without sacrificing reachability while still achievingbetter end-to-end delay. To this end, the first part of this research investigate the effects of forwarding probabilities and counter threshold values on theperformance of fixed probabilistic and counter-based schemes. The findings of this investigation are exploited to suggest a new hybrid approach, the Probabilistic Counter-Based Scheme (PCBS) that uses the number of duplicatepackets received to estimate neighbourhood density and assign a forwarding probability value to restrict the generation of so many redundant broadcastpackets. The simulation results reveal that under various network conditions PCBS reduces the number of redundant transmissions, collision rate and end-to-end delay significantly without sacrificing reachability when compared against counter-based, fixed probabilistic and flood broadcasting. Often in MANETs, there are regions of different node density due to node mobility. As such, PCBS can suffer from a degree of inflexibility in terms of rebroadcast probability, since each node is assigned the same forwardingprobability regardless of its local neighbourhood conditions. To address this shortcoming, the second part of this dissertation proposes an Adjusted Probabilistic Counter-Based Scheme (APCBS) that dynamically assigns theforwarding probability to a node based on its local node density using a mathematical function. Thus, a node located in a sparse region of the network is assigned a high forwarding probability while a node located in denser region is assigned a relatively lower forwarding probability. These combined effects enhance end-to-end delay, collision rate and reachability compared to PCBSvariant. The performance of most broadcasting schemes that have been suggested for MANETs including those presented here, have been analysed in the context of?pure? broadcast scenarios with relatively little investigation towards theirperformance impact on specific applications such as route discovery process. The final part of this thesis evaluates the performance of the well-known AODV routing protocol when augmented with APCBS route discovery. Results indicate that the resulting route discovery approach reduces the routing overhead, collision rate and end-to-end delay without degrading the overall network throughput compared to the existing approaches based on flooding, counterbased and fixed probabilistic route discovery.







Conference Proceedings


Book Description




VANET


Book Description

This book provides an invaluable introduction to inter-vehicular communications, demonstrating the networking and communication technologies for reducing fatalities, improving transportation efficiency, and minimising environmental impact. This book addresses the applications and technical aspects of radio-based vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communication that can be established by short- and medium range communication based on wireless local area network technology (primarily IEEE 802.11). It contains a coherent treatment of the important topics and technologies contributed by leading experts in the field, covering the potential applications for and their requirements on the communications system. The authors cover physical and medium access control layer issues with focus on IEEE 802.11-based systems, and show how many of the applications benefit when information is efficiently disseminated, and the techniques that provide attractive data aggregation (also includes design of the corresponding middleware). The book also considers issues such as IT-security (means and fundamental trade-off between security and privacy), current standardization activities such as IEEE 802.11p, and the IEEE 1609 standard series. Key Features: Covers the state-of-the-art in the field of vehicular inter-networks such as safety and efficiency applications, physical and medium access control layer issues, middleware, and security Shows how vehicular networks differ from other mobile networks and illustrates the idea of vehicle-to-vehicle communications with application scenarios and with current proofs of concept worldwide Addresses current standardization activities such as IEEE 802.11p and the IEEE 1609 standard series Offers a chapter on mobility models and their use for simulation of vehicular inter-networks Provides a coherent treatment of the important topics and technologies contributed by leading academic and industry experts in the field This book provides a reference for professional automotive technologists (OEMS and suppliers), professionals in the area of Intelligent Transportation Systems, and researchers attracted to the field of wireless vehicular communications. Third and fourth year undergraduate and graduate students will also find this book of interest. For additional information please visit http://www.vanetbook.com




Gossip Algorithms


Book Description

A systematic survey of many of these recent results on Gossip network algorithms.




Stochastic Geometry and Wireless Networks


Book Description

This volume bears on wireless network modeling and performance analysis. The aim is to show how stochastic geometry can be used in a more or less systematic way to analyze the phenomena that arise in this context. It first focuses on medium access control mechanisms used in ad hoc networks and in cellular networks. It then discusses the use of stochastic geometry for the quantitative analysis of routing algorithms in mobile ad hoc networks. The appendix also contains a concise summary of wireless communication principles and of the network architectures considered in the two volumes.