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AINA
2009
IEEE

Benchmarking Latency Effects on Mobility Tracking in WSNs

13 years 7 months ago
Benchmarking Latency Effects on Mobility Tracking in WSNs
The number of active nodes in a WSN deployment governs both the longevity of the network and the accuracy of applications using the network's data. As node hibernation techniques become more sophistocated, it is important that an accurate evaluation methodology is employed to ensure fair comparisons across different techniques. Examining both energy and accuracy ensures a claim of increased longevity for a particular technique can be contrasted against its associated drop, if any, in application accuracy. This change can also be as a result of increased latency and the accuracy encapsulates many aspects of WSN performance in one metric. In this work, we detail the first in a series of experiments designed to demonstrate the tradeoffs for a WSN and we employ mobility tracking as the application to benchmark accuracy. Additionally, we demonstrate experimental evidence for a potential adaptive mobility tracking protocol.
Richard Tynan, Michael J. O'Grady, Gregory M. P. O
Added 29 Sep 2010
Updated 29 Sep 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where AINA
Authors Richard Tynan, Michael J. O'Grady, Gregory M. P. O'Hare, Conor Muldoon
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