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Opportunistic source coding for data gathering in wireless sensor networks

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-11, 18:10 authored by Tao Cui, Lijun Chen, Tracey Ho, Steven H. Low, Lachlan L. H. Andrew
We propose a jointly opportunistic source coding and opportunistic routing (OSCOR) protocol for correlated data gathering in wireless sensor networks. OSCOR improves data gathering efficiency by exploiting opportunistic data compression and cooperative diversity associated with wireless broadcast advantage. The design of OSCOR involves several challenging issues across different network protocol layers. At the MAC layer, sensor nodes need to coordinate wireless transmission and packet forwarding to exploit multiuser diversity in packet reception. At the network layer, in order to achieve high diversity and compression gains, routing must be based on a metric that is dependent on not only link-quality but also compression opportunities. At the application layer, sensor nodes need a distributed source coding algorithm that has low coordination overhead and does not require the source distributions to be known. OSCOR provides practical solutions to these challenges incorporating a slightly modified 802.11 MAC, a distributed source coding scheme based on network coding and Lempel-Ziv coding, and a node compression ratio dependent metric combined with a modified Dijkstra's algorithm for path selection. We evaluate the performance of OSCOR through simulations, and show that OSCOR can potentially reduce power consumption by over 30% compared with an existing greedy scheme, routing driven compression, in a 4 x 4 grid network.

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ISBN

9781424414550

Journal title

2007 IEEE International Conference on Mobile Adhoc and Sensor Systems (MASS), Pisa, Italy, 08-11 October 2007

Conference name

2007 IEEE International Conference on Mobile Adhoc and Sensor Systems MASS, Pisa, Italy, 08-11 October 2007

Publisher

IEEE

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Copyright © 2007 IEEE. Paper is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Notes

This paper was awarded Best Paper at the 2007 IEEE International Conference on Mobile Adhoc and Sensor Systems. This work has been supported in part by DARPA grant N66001-06-C-2020, Caltech's Lee Center for Advanced Networking, a gift from Microsoft Research and the Australian Research Council.

Language

eng

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