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Directed diffusion for wireless sensor networking

Chalermek IntanagonwiwatChulalongkom University, Bangkok, ThailandRamesh GovindanDepartment of Computer Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USADeborah EstrinDepartment of Computer Science, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USAJohn HeidemannInformation Sciences Institute, University of Southern California, Marina del Rey, CA, USAFábio SilvaInformation Sciences Institute, University of Southern California, Marina del Rey, CA, USA
2003en
ABI

Abstract

Advances in processor, memory, and radio technology enable small and cheap nodes capable of sensing, communication, and computation. Networks of such nodes can coordinate to perform distributed sensing of environmental phenomena. We explore the directed diffusion paradigm for such coordination. Directed diffusion is data-centric in that all communication is for named data. All nodes in a directed-diffusion-based network are application aware. This enables diffusion to achieve energy savings by selecting empirically good paths and by caching and processing data in-network (e.g., data aggregation). We explore and evaluate the use of directed diffusion for a simple remote-surveillance sensor network analytically and experimentally. Our evaluation indicates that directed diffusion can achieve significant energy savings and can outperform idealized traditional schemes (e.g., omniscient multicast) under the investigated scenarios.

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