| Zhao, Y., Govidan R., Estrin, D.: Residual Energy Scan for Monitoring Sensor Networks. Wireless Communications and Networking Conference, Orlando, FL, USA, March, 2002 |
....have to be closely monitored and made known to the remote controller or control center. In other words, even when no anomalies take place, the control center has to constantly ensure that the sensors are where they are supposed to be, are functioning normally, have enough energy and so on. In [1] a scheme was proposed to monitor the (approximate) residual energy in the network. In [2] 4] various methods of health information propagation were proposed. However, to the best of our knowledge, a general approach to the network health monitoring and propagation in a wireless sensor network ....
....to one. The biggest problem with this approach is that the packet size increases due to aggregation, especially if addresses are not logically related which is often the case. As the size of the network increases, this aggregation may cease to be e#ective. Lots of aggregation methods are proposed[1], 2] 4] 7] which are all application specific. In this case, in order for such aggregation to work, some unique addressing mechanism has to be developed given that the control center does not have all the routing information. 3. Adaptive Sending Rate Since fixed sending rate has very ....
Yonggang Jerry Zhao, Ramesh Govindan, and Deborah Estrin. Residual Energy Scan for Monitoring Sensor Networks. IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC'02). March 2002.
....and the sensor network have to be closely monitored and made known to some remote controller or control center. In other words, even when no anomalies take place, the control center has to constantly ensure that the sensors are where they are supposed to be, are functioning normally, and so on. In [10] a scheme was proposed to monitor the (approximate) residual energy in the network. However, to the best of our knowledge, a general approach to the network health monitoring and alarm propagation in a wireless sensor network has not been studied. The detection of anomalies and faults can be ....
....commonly proposed for sensor network applications to reduce tra#c volume and improve energy e#ciency. Examples include data naming for in network aggregation considered in [3] the greedy aggregation tree construction in [5] to improve path sharing, and the abstracted scans of sensor energy in [10] via in network aggregation of network state. In our scenario, along a single route, sensors can concatenate their IDs or addresses into the update packet they relay, so that when the control center gets this packet, it can update information regarding all sensors involved in relaying this packet. ....
Y. J. Zhao, R. Govindan, and D. Estrin. Residual energy scan for monitoring sensor networks. In IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC'02), March 2002.
No context found.
Zhao, Y., Govidan R., Estrin, D.: Residual Energy Scan for Monitoring Sensor Networks. Wireless Communications and Networking Conference, Orlando, FL, USA, March, 2002
No context found.
Y. Zhao, R. Govidan and D. Estrin, "Residual Energy Scan for Monitoring Sensor Networks", Wireless Communications and Networking Conference, Orlando, USA, 2002.
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