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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Max-min d-cluster formation in wireless ad hoc networks

TLDR
A heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network that tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes and has a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes.
Abstract
An ad hoc network may be logically represented as a set of clusters. The clusterheads form a d-hop dominating set. Each node is at most d hops from a clusterhead. Clusterheads form a virtual backbone and may be used to route packets for nodes in their cluster. Previous heuristics restricted themselves to 1-hop clusters. We show that the minimum d-hop dominating set problem is NP-complete. Then we present a heuristic to form d-clusters in a wireless ad hoc network. Nodes are assumed to have a non-deterministic mobility pattern. Clusters are formed by diffusing node identities along the wireless links. When the heuristic terminates, a node either becomes a clusterhead, or is at most d wireless hops away from its clusterhead. The value of d is a parameter of the heuristic. The heuristic can be run either at regular intervals, or whenever the network configuration changes. One of the features of the heuristic is that it tends to re-elect existing clusterheads even when the network configuration changes. This helps to reduce the communication overheads during transition from old clusterheads to new clusterheads. Also, there is a tendency to evenly distribute the mobile nodes among the clusterheads, and evently distribute the responsibility of acting as clusterheads among all nodes. Thus, the heuristic is fair and stable. Simulation experiments demonstrate that the proposed heuristic is better than the two earlier heuristics, namely the LCA and degree-based solutions.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Root Cause Analysis of Failures in Interdependent Power-Communication Networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the root cause of failure (RDF) problem in interdependent power communication networks is studied and an O(ln(n))-approximation algorithm is provided.
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Constraint-driven clustering

TL;DR: This paper introduces a novel cluster model, Constraint-Driven Clustering (CDC), which finds an a priori unspecified number of compact clusters that satisfy all user-provided constraints and proposes a novel dynamic data structure, the CD-Tree, which organizes data points in leaf nodes such that each leaf node approximately satisfies the CDC constraints and minimizes the objective function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy-efficient power/rate control and scheduling in hybrid TDMA/CDMA wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: A hybrid TDMA/CDMA wireless sensor network is considered and the energy efficiency obtained by combining adaptive power/rate control with time-domain scheduling is investigated and a heuristic algorithm is presented, which iteratively searches for the best schedule in such a way that the energy consumption keeps decreasing after every iteration.
Journal Article

Real-time coordination and routing in wireless sensor and actor networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a real-time coordination and routing (RCR) framework for WSAN, which addresses the issues of coordination among sensors and actors and honors the delay bound for routing in distributed manner.
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Topology management for improving routing and network performances in mobile ad hoc networks

TL;DR: This work introduces the concept of quality of connectivity for extracting the links connecting the pair of best nodes, and uses this quality to construct the forest from the topology of the network.
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