Exploit prediction to handle mobility in wireless ad hoc networks
Manage episode 155956013 series 1172274
Content provided by Hamilton Institute. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Hamilton Institute or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
Speaker: Dr. X. Li Abstract: Node mobility is often a hindering factor of the networking process in wireless ad hoc networks. In this talk, we will introduce our two recent works that address this problem through a prediction approach. The first work proposes an AutoRegressive Hello protocol (ARH) for mobile ad hoc networks. A hello protocol is a basic tool for neighborhood discovery. It requires nodes to claim their existence/aliveness by periodic ‘hello’ messages. ARH evolves along with network dynamics by predicting node mobility, and seamlessly tunes itself to obtain ‘hello’ frequency using local knowledge only. The second work proposes a distributed Prediction-based Secure and Reliable routing framework (PSR) for wireless body area networks. In this protocol, each node predicts the quality of every incidental link and any change in the neighbor set too, based on an autoregressive model. According to the prediction result, it selects routing next hope and decides whether to enables/disables source authentication.
…
continue reading
63 episoade