EDLA Tradeoffs for Wireless Sensor Network Target Tracking

Publication Type  Conference Paper
Year of Publication  2009
Authors  Tynan, R.; O'Hare, G.M.P.; O'Grady, M.J.; Muldoon, C.
Conference Name  In: The Second International Workshop on Specialized Ad Hoc Networks and Systems (SAHNS 2009), In Proceedings of The 29th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS 2009)
Conference Date  26 June 2009
Conference Location  Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Key Words  RP3
Abstract  

The number of active nodes in a WSN deployment governs both the longevity of the network and the accuracy of applications using the network’s data. As node hibernation techniques become more sophistocated, it is important that an accurate evaluation methodology is employed to ensure fair comparisons across different techniques. Examining both energy and accuracy ensures a claim of increased longevity for a particular technique can be contrasted against its associated drop, if any, in application accuracy. This change can also be as a result of increased latency and the accuracy encapsulates many aspects of WSN performance in one metric. In this work, we detail the first in a series of simulation experiments designed to demonstrate the tradeoffs for a WSN and we employ mobility tracking as the application to benchmark accuracy. Additionally, we demonstrate experimental evidence for a potential adaptive mobility tracking protocol.

URL  http://irserver.ucd.ie/dspace/handle/10197/1338