Dynamic Wireless Sensor Networks 1st Edition by Sharief Oteafy, Hossam Hassanein – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1848215312, 9781848215313
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1848215312
ISBN 13: 9781848215313
Author: Sharief M.A. Oteafy, Hossam S. Hassanein
In this title, the authors leap into a novel paradigm of scalability and cost-effectiveness, on the basis of resource reuse. In a world with much abundance of wirelessly accessible devices, WSN deployments should capitalize on the resources already available in the region of deployment, and only augment it with the components required to meet new application requirements. However, if the required resources already exist in that region, WSN deployment converges to an assignment and scheduling scheme to accommodate for the new application given the existing resources. Such resources are polled from many fields, including multiple WSNs already in the field, static networks (WiFi, WiMAX, cellular, etc) in addition to municipal, industrial and mobile resources.The architecture, framework and pricing policy, as well as approaches for backward compatibility with existing deployments, are presented in this book. We elaborate on the formalization of the problem, and contrast with existing work on coverage. This paradigm adopts optimal assignments in WSNs and exploits dynamic re-programming for boosting post-deployment and backward compatible protocols.
Table of contents:
1 Evolution of Wireless Sensor Networks
1.1. The progression of wireless sensor networks
1.2. Remote sensing: in retrospect
1.3. Inherited designs and protocols from MANets
1.4. Book outline
1.5. Summary
1.6. Bibliography
2 Shifting to Dynamic WSN Paradigms
2.1. The hurdle of static operation
2.2. Versatile operating systems
2.3. Dynamic reprogramming
2.4. The rise of service-oriented WSNs
2.5. Crowd sensing
2.6. Bibliography
3 Resilience and Post-Deployment Maintenance
3.1. Impact of harsh environments on network design
3.2. High failure proneness (of nodes and communication)
3.3. Post-deployment maintenance
3.4. Re-deployment
3.5. Self-re-distributing SNs and mobility
3.6. Bibliography
4 Current Hindrances in WSNs
4.1. Lack of consensus
4.2. Resource underutilization in the black-box paradigm
4.3. Redundant deployments
4.4. Single-application paradigm
4.5. Redundancy to boost resilience
4.6. IPv6 and enabling internet connectivity
4.7. Bibliography
5 Cloud-Centric WSNs
5.1. Introduction
5.2. The evolution of cloud-centric architectures
5.3. SOA and SODA
5.4. Hindrances in adopting cloud-centric WSNs
5.5. Future directions
5.6. Bibliography
6 The Resource-Reuse WSN Paradigm
6.1. Contributions of the RR-WSN paradigm
6.2. RR-WSN: system model
6.3. Bibliography
7 Component-Based WSNs: A Resilient Architecture
7.1. Component-based DWSN architecture
7.2. WDSN in operation: the synergy of dynamic sensing
7.3. Resilience model
7.4. Bibliography
8 Dynamic WSNs – Utilizing Ubiquitous Resources
8.1. System model and assumptions
8.2. Optimal mapping
8.3. BIP formulation
8.4. Novel performance evaluation metrics
8.5. A note on tractability
8.6. Bibliography
9 Realizing a Synergetic WSN Architecture for All Resources
9.1. Introduction
9.2. Motivation and background
9.3. System model – arbitrators for WSNs with transient resources
9.4. Resource attributes
9.5. Transient resources – a special case
9.6. Mobility models
9.7. Usage cost
9.8. On maximal matching and construed equality between resource providers
9.9. Bibliography
10 Future Directions in Sensor Networks
10.1. Why applications should not be the sole drive
10.2. Ode to formal design over mere analysis
10.3. The call for synergy
10.4. The rise of biosensors, nano-networks and intelligent prostheses
10.5. Bibliography
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Tags: Sharief Oteafy, Hossam Hassanein, Dynamic, Networks