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499
A Pairwise Key Pre-Distribution Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks
, 2003
"... this paper, we provide a framework in which to study the security of key pre-distribution schemes, propose a new key pre-distribution scheme which substantially improves the resilience of the network compared to previous schemes, and give an in-depth analysis of our scheme in terms of network resili ..."
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Cited by 297 (12 self)
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this paper, we provide a framework in which to study the security of key pre-distribution schemes, propose a new key pre-distribution scheme which substantially improves the resilience of the network compared to previous schemes, and give an in-depth analysis of our scheme in terms of network resilience and associated overhead. Our scheme exhibits a nice threshold property: when the number of compromised nodes is less than the threshold, the probability that communications between any additional nodes are compromised is close to zero. This desirable property lowers the initial payoff of smaller-scale network breaches to an adversary, and makes it necessary for the adversary to attack a large fraction of the network before it can achieve any significant gain
Routing Techniques in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey
- IEEE Wireless Communications
, 2004
"... Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) consist of small nodes with sensing, computation, and wireless communications capabilities. Many routing, power management, and data dissemination protocols have been specifically designed for WSNs where energy awareness is an essential design issue. The focus, howeve ..."
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Cited by 186 (0 self)
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Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) consist of small nodes with sensing, computation, and wireless communications capabilities. Many routing, power management, and data dissemination protocols have been specifically designed for WSNs where energy awareness is an essential design issue. The focus, however, has been given to the routing protocols which might differ depending on the application and network architecture. In this paper, we present a survey of the state-of-the-art routing techniques in WSNs. We first outline the design challenges for routing protocols in WSNs followed by a comprehensive survey of different routing techniques. Overall, the routing techniques are classified into three categories based on the underlying network structure: flat, hierarchical, and location-based routing. Furthermore, these protocols can be classified into multipath-based, query-based, negotiation-based, QoS-based, and coherent-based depending on the protocol operation. We study the design tradeoffs between energy and communication overhead savings in every routing paradigm. We also highlight the advantages and performance issues of each routing technique. The paper concludes with possible future research areas. 1
Distributed Localization in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Quantitative Comparison
, 2003
"... This paper studies the problem of determining the node locations in ad-hoc sensor networks. We compare three distributed localization algorithms (Ad-hoc positioning, Robust positioning, and N-hop multilateration) on a single simulation platform. The algorithms share a common, three-phase structure: ..."
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Cited by 157 (5 self)
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This paper studies the problem of determining the node locations in ad-hoc sensor networks. We compare three distributed localization algorithms (Ad-hoc positioning, Robust positioning, and N-hop multilateration) on a single simulation platform. The algorithms share a common, three-phase structure: (1) determine node--anchor distances, (2) compute node positions, and (3) optionally refine the positions through an iterative procedure. We present a detailed analysis comparing the various alternatives for each phase, as well as a head-to-head comparison of the complete algorithms. The main conclusion is that no single algorithm performs best; which algorithm is to be preferred depends on the conditions (range errors, connectivity, anchor fraction, etc.). In each case, however, there is significant room for improving accuracy and/or increasing coverage.
A Key Management Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks Using Deployment Knowledge
, 2004
"... To achieve security in wireless sensor networks, it is important to be able to encrypt messages sent among sensor nodes. Keys for encryption purposes must be agreed upon by communicating nodes. Due to resource constraints, achieving such key agreement in wireless sensor networks is non-trivial. Many ..."
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Cited by 138 (4 self)
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To achieve security in wireless sensor networks, it is important to be able to encrypt messages sent among sensor nodes. Keys for encryption purposes must be agreed upon by communicating nodes. Due to resource constraints, achieving such key agreement in wireless sensor networks is non-trivial. Many key agreement schemes used in general networks, such as Diffie-Hellman and public-key based schemes, are not suitable for wireless sensor networks. Pre-distribution of secret keys for all pairs of nodes is not viable due to the large amount of memory used when the network size is large. Recently, a random key predistribution scheme and its improvements have been proposed.
On Network Correlated Data Gathering
- IN IEEE INFOCOM
, 2004
"... We consider the problem of correlated data gathering by a network with a sink node and a tree communication structure, where the goal is to minimize the total transmission cost of transporting the information collected by the nodes, to the sink node. Two coding strategies are analyzed: a SlepianWolf ..."
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Cited by 75 (8 self)
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We consider the problem of correlated data gathering by a network with a sink node and a tree communication structure, where the goal is to minimize the total transmission cost of transporting the information collected by the nodes, to the sink node. Two coding strategies are analyzed: a SlepianWolf model where optimal coding is complex and transmission optimization is simple, and a joint entropy coding model with explicit communication where coding is simple and transmission optimization is difficult. This problem requires a joint optimization of the rate allocation at the nodes and of the transmission structure. For the Slepian-Wolf setting, we derive a closed form solution and an efficient distributed approximation algorithm with a good performance. For the explicit communication case, we prove that building an optimal data gathering tree is NPcomplete and we propose various distributed approximation algorithms.
Flocking for multi-agent dynamic systems: Algorithms and theory
- IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control
, 2006
"... Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control Technical Report CIT-CDS 2004-005 In this paper, we present a theoretical framework for design and analysis of distributed flocking algorithms. Two cases of flocking in free-space and presence of multiple obstacles are considered. We present th ..."
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Cited by 73 (1 self)
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Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control Technical Report CIT-CDS 2004-005 In this paper, we present a theoretical framework for design and analysis of distributed flocking algorithms. Two cases of flocking in free-space and presence of multiple obstacles are considered. We present three flocking algorithms: two for free-flocking and one for constrained flocking. A comprehensive analysis of the first two algorithms is provided. We demonstrate the first algorithm embodies all three rules of Reynolds. This is a formal approach to extraction of interaction rules that lead to the emergence of collective behavior. We show that the first algorithm generically leads to regular fragmentation, whereas the second and third algorithms both lead to flocking. A systematic method is provided for construction of cost functions (or collective potentials) for flocking. These collective potentials penalize deviation from a class of lattice-shape objects called α-lattices. We use a multi-species framework for construction of collective potentials that consist of flock-members, or α-agents, and virtual agents associated with α-agents called β- and γ-agents. We show that the tracking/migration problem for flocks can be solved using an algorithm with a peer-to-peer architecture. Each node (or macro-agent) of this peer-to-peer network is the aggregation of all three species of agents. The implication of this fact is that “flocks
Clock synchronization for wireless sensor networks: A Survey
- Ad Hoc Networks (Elsevier
, 2005
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Localization of Wireless Sensor Networks with a Mobile Beacon
, 2003
"... Wireless sensor networks have the potential to become the pervasive sensing (and actuating) technology of the future. For many applications, a large number of inexpensive sensors is preferable to a few expensive ones. The large number of sensors in a sensor network and most application scenarios ..."
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Cited by 59 (1 self)
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Wireless sensor networks have the potential to become the pervasive sensing (and actuating) technology of the future. For many applications, a large number of inexpensive sensors is preferable to a few expensive ones. The large number of sensors in a sensor network and most application scenarios preclude hand placement of the sensors. Determining the physical location of the sensors after they have been deployed is known as the problem of localization. In this paper, we present a localization technique based on a single mobile beacon aware of its position (e.g. by being equipped with a GPS receiver). Sensor nodes
Energy-efficient target coverage in wireless sensor networks
- in IEEE Infocom
, 2005
"... Abstract — A critical aspect of applications with wireless sensor networks is network lifetime. Power-constrained wireless sensor networks are usable as long as they can communicate sensed data to a processing node. Sensing and communications consume energy, therefore judicious power management and ..."
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Cited by 58 (2 self)
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Abstract — A critical aspect of applications with wireless sensor networks is network lifetime. Power-constrained wireless sensor networks are usable as long as they can communicate sensed data to a processing node. Sensing and communications consume energy, therefore judicious power management and sensor scheduling can effectively extend network lifetime. To cover a set of targets with known locations when ground access in the remote area is prohibited, one solution is to deploy the sensors remotely, from an aircraft. The lack of precise sensor placement is compensated by a large sensor population deployed in the drop zone, that would improve the probability of target coverage. The data collected from the sensors is sent to a central node (e.g. cluster head) for processing. In this paper we propose an efficient method to extend the sensor network life time by organizing the sensors into a maximal number of set covers that are activated successively. Only the sensors from the current active set are responsible for monitoring all targets and for transmitting the collected data, while all other nodes are in a low-energy sleep mode. By allowing sensors to participate in multiple sets, our problem formulation increases the network lifetime compared with related work [2], that has the additional requirements of sensor sets being disjoint and operating equal time intervals. In this paper we model the solution as the maximum set covers problem and design two heuristics that efficiently compute the sets, using linear programming and a greedy approach. Simulation results are presented to verify our approaches.
Distributed Kalman filtering in sensor networks with quantifiable performance
- In 2005 Fourth International Symposium on Information Processing in Sensor Networks (IPSN
, 2005
"... We analyze the performance of a distributed Kalman filter proposed in recent work on distributed dynamical systems. This approach to distributed estimation is novel in that it admits a systematic analysis of its performance as various network quantities such as connection density, topology, and band ..."
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Cited by 45 (6 self)
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We analyze the performance of a distributed Kalman filter proposed in recent work on distributed dynamical systems. This approach to distributed estimation is novel in that it admits a systematic analysis of its performance as various network quantities such as connection density, topology, and bandwidth are varied. Our main contribution is a frequency-domain characterization of the distributed estimator’s performance; this is quantified in terms of a special matrix associated with the connection topology called the graph Laplacian, and also the rate of message exchange between immediate neighbors in the communication network. We present simulations for an array of sonar-like sensors to verify our analysis results. 1.

