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MSWIM
2004
ACM

Experimental evaluation of wireless simulation assumptions

13 years 10 months ago
Experimental evaluation of wireless simulation assumptions
All analytical and simulation research on ad hoc wireless networks must necessarily model radio propagation using simplifying assumptions. Although it is tempting to assume that all radios have circular range, have perfect coverage in that range, and travel on a two-dimensional plane, most researchers are increasingly aware of the need to represent more realistic features, including hills, obstacles, link asymmetries, and unpredictable fading. Although many have noted the complexity of real radio propagation, and some have quantified the effect of overly simple assumptions on the simulation of ad hoc network protocols, we provide a comprehensive review of six assumptions that are still part of many ad hoc network simulation studies. In particular, we use an extensive set of measurements from a large outdoor routing experiment to demonstrate the weakness of these assumptions, and show how these assumptions cause simulation results to differ significantly from experimental results. We ...
David Kotz, Calvin C. Newport, Robert S. Gray, Jas
Added 30 Jun 2010
Updated 30 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where MSWIM
Authors David Kotz, Calvin C. Newport, Robert S. Gray, Jason Liu, Yougu Yuan, Chip Elliott
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