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Multihop Wireless Networks Opportunistic Routing Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing Series

Langue : Anglais

Auteurs :

Couverture de l’ouvrage Multihop Wireless Networks
This book provides an introduction to opportunistic routing an emerging technology designed to improve the packet forwarding reliability, network capacity and energy efficiency of multihop wireless networks

This book presents a comprehensive background to the technological challenges lying behind opportunistic routing. The authors cover many fundamental research issues for this new concept, including the basic principles, performance limit and performance improvement of opportunistic routing compared to traditional routing, energy efficiency and distributed opportunistic routing protocol design, geographic opportunistic routing, opportunistic broadcasting, and security issues associated with opportunistic routing, etc. Furthermore, the authors discuss technologies such as multi-rate, multi-channel, multi-radio wireless communications, energy detection, channel measurement, etc. The book brings together all the new results on this topic in a systematic, coherent and unified presentation and provides a much needed comprehensive introduction to this topic.

Key Features:

  • Addresses opportunistic routing, an emerging technology designed to improve the packet forwarding reliability, network capacity and energy efficiency of multihop wireless networks
  • Discusses the technological challenges lying behind this new technology, and covers a wide range of practical implementation issues
  • Explores many fundamental research issues for this new concept, including the basic principles of opportunistic routing, performance limits and performance improvement, and compares them to traditional routing (e.g. energy efficiency and distributed opportunistic routing protocol design, broadcasting, and security issues)
  • Covers technologies such as multi-rate, multi-channel, multi-radio wireless communications, energy detection, channel measurement, etc.

This book provides an invaluable reference for researchers working in the field of wireless networks and wireless communications, and Wireless professionals. Graduate students will also find this book of interest.

About the Series Editors.

Preface.

List of Abbreviations.

1 Introduction.

1.1 Multihop wireless networks.

1.2 Routing challenges in MWNs.

1.3 Routing techniques in MWNs.

1.4 Related work.

1.5 Book contribution.

1.6 System model and assumptions.

References.

2 Taxonomy of opportunistic routing: principles and behaviors.

2.1 EPA generalization.

2.2 Principles of local behavior of GOR.

2.3 Least cost opportunistic routing.

2.4 Conclusions.

References.

3 Energy efficiency of geographic opportunistic routing.

3.1 EGOR problem formulation.

3.2 Efficient localized node-selection algorithms.

3.3 Energy-efficient geographic opportunistic routing.

3.4 Performance evaluation.

3.5 Conclusion.

References.

4 Capacity of multirate opportunistic routing.

4.1 Computing throughput bound of OR.

4.2 Impact of transmission rate and forwarding strategy on throughput.

4.3 Rate and candidate selection schemes.

4.4 Performance evaluation.

4.5 Conclusion.

References.

5 Multiradio multichannel opportunistic routing.

5.1 Introduction.

5.2 System model and opportunistic routing primer.

5.3 Problem formulation.

5.4 Forwarding priority scheduling.

5.5 Performance evaluation 1.

5.6 Conclusions and future work.

References.

6 Medium access control for opportunistic routing - candidate coordination.

6.1 Existing candidate coordination schemes.

6.2 Design and analysis of FSA.

6.3 Simulation results and evaluation.

6.4 Conclusions.

References.

7 Integration of opportunistic routing and network coding.

7.1 A brief review of MORE.

7.2 Mobile content distribution in VANETs.

7.3 Related works on mobile content distribution in VANETs.

7.4 Background on symbol-level network coding.

7.5 CodeOn: a cooperative popular content broadcast scheme for VANETs based on SLNC.

7.6 CodePlay: a live multimedia streaming scheme for VANETs based on SLNC.

7.7 Conclusion.

References.

8 Multirate geographic opportunistic routing protocol design.

8.1 System model.

8.2 Impact of transmission rate and forwarding strategy on OR performance.

8.3 Opportunistic effective one-hop throughput (OEOT).

8.4 Heuristic candidate selection algorithm.

8.5 Multirate link-quality measurement.

8.6 Performance evaluation.

8.7 Conclusion.

References.

9 Opportunistic routing security.

9.1 Attack on link quality measurement.

9.2 Attacks on opportunistic coordination protocols.

9.3 Resilience to packet-dropping attack.

9.4 Conclusion.

References.

10 Opportunistic broadcasts in vehicular networks.

10.1 Related works on broadcasts in general MWNs.

10.2 Related works on broadcasts in VANETs.

10.3 Problem statement.

10.4 Overview of OppCast.

10.5 OppCast: main design.

10.6 Parameter optimization.

10.7 Performance evaluation.

10.8 Conclusion.

References

11 Conclusions and future research.

11.1 Summary.

11.2 Future research directions.

References.

Index.

Dr. Wenjing Lou, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Wenjing Lou holds a BE and M.Eng in Computer Science and Engineering from Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, P.R.China, a M.A.Sc in Computer Communications from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore and a PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Florida. Her research interests include Wireless Sensor Networks, Ad hoc Networks, and Wireless Mesh Networks, with emphases on Network Security and Routing. Lou is guest editor for the International Journal of Wireless Information Networks, Editor for IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications and a Senior Member of IEEE.

Kai Zeng, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Kai Zeng graduated with a PhD degree from Worcester polytechnic Institute in 2008 and is currently a post-doc research fellow at University of California, Davis.

Ming Li, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
Ming Li is currently a PhD student at Worcester Polytechnic Institute.