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Proceedings ArticleDOI

New QoS and geographical routing in wireless biomedical sensor networks

TLDR
This protocol is the first that makes use of the diversity in the data traffic while considering latency, reliability residual energy in the sensor nodes, and transmission power between sensor nodes as QoS metrics of the multi-objective problem.
Abstract
In this paper we deal with biomedical applications of wireless sensor networks, and propose a new quality of service (QoS) routing protocol. The protocol design relies on traffic diversity of these applications and ensures a differentiation routing using QoS metrics. It is based on modular and scalable approach, where the protocol operates in a distributed, localized, computation and memory efficient way. The data traffic is classified into several categories according to the required QoS metrics, where different routing metrics and techniques are accordingly suggested for each category. The protocol attempts for each packet to fulfill the required QoS metrics in a power-aware way, by locally selecting the best candidate. It employs memory and computation efficient estimators, and uses a multi-sink single-path approach to increase reliability. The main contribution of this paper is data traffic based QoS with regard to all the considered QoS metrics. To our best knowledge, this protocol is the first that makes use of the diversity in the data traffic while considering latency, reliability residual energy in the sensor nodes, and transmission power between sensor nodes as QoS metrics of the multi-objective problem. The proposed algorithm can operate with any MAC protocol, provided that it employs an ACK mechanism. Performance evaluation through a simulation study, comparing the new protocol with state-of-the QoS and localized protocols, show that it outperforms all the compared protocols.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless Body Area Networks: A Survey

TL;DR: The current state-of-art of WBANs is surveyed based on the latest standards and publications, and open issues and challenges within each area are explored as a source of inspiration towards future developments inWBANs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surveying wearable human assistive technology for life and safety critical applications: standards, challenges and opportunities

TL;DR: This survey presents a comprehensive study on the applications scenarios, their context and specific requirements, and explores details of the key enabling standards, existing state-of-the-art research studies, and projects to understand their limitations before realizing aforementioned applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Data-centric multiobjective QoS-aware routing protocol for body sensor networks.

TL;DR: A data-centric multiobjective QoS-Aware routing protocol, called DMQoS, is proposed, which facilitates the system to achieve customized QoS services for each traffic category differentiated according to the generated data types.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Routing Protocols in Wireless Body Sensor Networks

TL;DR: This paper identifies various issues and challenges in pursuit of effective routing in WBSNs and provides a detailed literature review of the various existing routing protocols used in the WBSN domain by discussing their strengths and weaknesses.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Routing Protocols in Wireless Body Area Networks

TL;DR: A survey of existing routing protocols mainly proposed for BANs is provided, further classified into five main categories namely, temperature based, crosslayer, cluster based, cost-effective and QoS-based routing, where each protocol is described under its specified category.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

GloMoSim: a library for parallel simulation of large-scale wireless networks

TL;DR: The paper describes the GloMoSim library, addresses a number of issues relevant to its parallelization, and presents a set of experimental results on the IBM 9076 SP, a distributed memory multicomputer.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

SPEED: a stateless protocol for real-time communication in sensor networks

TL;DR: SPEED is a highly efficient and scalable protocol for sensor networks where the resources of each node are scarce, and specifically tailored to be a stateless, localized algorithm with minimal control overhead.
Journal ArticleDOI

MMSPEED: multipath Multi-SPEED protocol for QoS guarantee of reliability and. Timeliness in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: Simulation results show that MMSPEED provides QoS differentiation in both reliability and timeliness domains and, as a result, significantly improves the effective capacity of a sensor network in terms of number of flows that meet both reliabilityand timelier requirements up to 50 percent.
Journal ArticleDOI

An updated survey of GA-based multiobjective optimization techniques

TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to summarize and organize the information on current evolutionary-based approaches, emphasizing the importance of analyzing the operations research techniques in which most of them are based, in an attempt to motivate researchers to look into these mathematical programming approaches for new ways of exploiting the search capabilities of evolutionary algorithms.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Real-time Power-Aware Routing in Sensor Networks

TL;DR: Simulations based on a realistic radio model of MICA2 motes show that RPAR significantly reduces the number of deadlines missed and energy consumption compared to existing real-time and energy-efficient routing protocols.
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