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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communication in a heterogeneous wireless network – Performance evaluation

TLDR
Field studies conducted in this research demonstrated that the use of Het-Net broadened the range and coverage of V2V and V2I communications and the application layer handoff technique to maintain seamless connectivity for CVT applications was successfully demonstrated and can be adopted in future Het -Net supported connected vehicle applications.
Abstract
Connected Vehicle Technology (CVT) requires wireless data transmission between vehicles (V2V), and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I). Evaluating the performance of different network options for V2V and V2I communication that ensure optimal utilization of resources is a prerequisite when designing and developing robust wireless networks for CVT applications. Though dedicated short range communication (DSRC) has been considered as the primary communication option for CVT safety applications, the use of other wireless technologies (e.g., Wi-Fi, LTE, WiMAX) allow longer range communications and throughput requirements that could not be supported by DSRC alone. Further, the use of other wireless technology potentially reduces the need for costly DSRC infrastructure. In this research, the authors evaluated the performance of Het-Net consisting of Wi-Fi, DSRC and LTE technologies for V2V and V2I communications. An application layer handoff method was developed to enable Het-Net communication for two CVT applications: traffic data collection, and forward collision warning. The handoff method ensures the optimal utilization of available communication options (i.e., eliminate the need of using multiple communication options at the same time) and corresponding backhaul communication infrastructure depending on the connected vehicle application requirements. Field studies conducted in this research demonstrated that the use of Het-Net broadened the range and coverage of V2V and V2I communications. The use of the application layer handoff technique to maintain seamless connectivity for CVT applications was also successfully demonstrated and can be adopted in future Het-Net supported connected vehicle applications. A long handoff time was observed when the application switches from LTE to Wi-Fi. The delay is largely due to the time required to activate the 802.11 link and the time required for the vehicle to associate with the RSU (i.e., access point). Modifying the application to implement a soft handoff where a new network is seamlessly connected before breaking from the existing network can greatly reduce (or eliminate) the interruption of network service observed by the application. However, the use of a Het-Net did not compromise the performance of the traffic data collection application as this application does not require very low latency, unlike connected vehicle safety applications. Field tests revealed that the handoff between networks in Het-Net required several seconds (i.e., higher than 200 ms required for safety applications). Thus, Het-Net could not be used to support safety applications that require communication latency less than 200 ms. However, Het-Net could provide additional/supplementary connectivity for safety applications to warn vehicles upstream to take proactive actions to avoid problem locations. To validate and establish the findings from field tests that included a limited number of connected vehicles, ns-3 simulation experiments with a larger number of connected vehicles were conducted involving a DSRC and LTE Het-Net scenario. The latency and packet delivery error trend obtained from ns-3 simulation were found to be similar to the field experiment results.

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Citations
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Autonomous vehicle perception: The technology of today and tomorrow

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the state-of-the-art AV perception technology available today, which highlights future research areas and draws conclusions about the most effective methods for AV perception and its effect on localization and mapping.
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Toward Secure Blockchain-Enabled Internet of Vehicles: Optimizing Consensus Management Using Reputation and Contract Theory

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a two-stage soft security enhancement solution: miner selection and block verification, which evaluates candidates' reputation using both past interactions and recommended opinions from other vehicles The candidates with high reputation are selected to be active miners and standby miners in order to prevent internal collusion among active miners.
Journal ArticleDOI

DSRC Versus 4G-LTE For Connected Vehicle Applications: A Study on Field Experiments of Vehicular Communication Performance

TL;DR: 4G-LTE is more preferred for the nonsafety applications, such as traffic information transmission, file download, or Internet accessing, which does not necessarily require the high-speed real-time communication, while for the safety applications,such as Collision Avoidance or electronic traffic sign, DSRC outperforms the 4G- LTE.
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Cybersecurity challenges in vehicular communications

TL;DR: A three-layer framework (sensing, communication and control) through which automotive security threats can be better understood is proposed, which provides the state-of-the-art review on attacks and threats relevant to the communication layer and presents countermeasures.
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Internet of Vehicles: Sensing-Aided Transportation Information Collection and Diffusion

TL;DR: An IoV-aided local traffic information collection architecture, a sink node selection scheme for the information influx, and an optimal traffic information transmission model are proposed, which show the efficiency and feasibility of the proposed models.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

GPSR: greedy perimeter stateless routing for wireless networks

TL;DR: Greedy Perimeter Stateless Routing is presented, a novel routing protocol for wireless datagram networks that uses the positions of routers and a packet's destination to make packet forwarding decisions and its scalability on densely deployed wireless networks is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

VADD: Vehicle-Assisted Data Delivery in Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks

TL;DR: This work proposes several vehicle-assisted data delivery (VADD) protocols to forward the packet to the best road with the lowest data-delivery delay, and Experimental results show that the proposed VADD protocols outperform existing solutions in terms of packet-del delivery ratio, data packet Delay, and protocol overhead.

Evaluation of Traffic Data Obtained via GPS-Enabled Mobile Phones: the Mobile Century Field Experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, a traffic monitoring system based on GPS-enabled smartphones exploits the extensive coverage provided by the cellular network, the high accuracy in position and velocity measurements provided by GPS devices, and the existing infrastructure of the communication network.
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