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BIOWIRE
2007
Springer

Biologically Inspired Self Selective Routing with Preferred Path Selection

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Biologically Inspired Self Selective Routing with Preferred Path Selection
This paper presents a biologically inspired routing protocol called Self Selective Routing with preferred path selection (SSR(v3)). Its operation resembles the behavior of a biological ant that finds a food source by following the strongest pheromone scent left by scout ants at each fork of a path. Likewise, at each hop of a multi-hop path, a packet using the Self Selective Routing (SSR) protocol moves to the node with the shortest hop distance to the destination. Each intermediate node on a route to the destination uses a transmission back-off delay to select a path to follow for each packet of a flow. Neither an ant nor a packet knows in advance the route that each will follow as it is decided at each step. Therefore, when a route becomes severed by a failure, they can dynamically and locally adjust their routing to traverse the shortest surviving path. Preferred path selection reduces transmission delay by essentially removing back-off delay for the node that carried the previou...
Boleslaw K. Szymanski, Christopher Morrell, Sahin
Added 07 Jun 2010
Updated 07 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where BIOWIRE
Authors Boleslaw K. Szymanski, Christopher Morrell, Sahin Cem Geyik, Thomas A. Babbitt
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