Sciweavers

244 search results - page 33 / 49
» Location-unaware coverage in wireless sensor networks
Sort
View
WSNA
2003
ACM
15 years 3 months ago
Analysis on the redundancy of wireless sensor networks
Wireless sensor networks consist of a large number of tiny sensors that have only limited energy supply. One of the major challenges in constructing such networks is to maintain l...
Yong Gao, Kui Wu, Fulu Li
WOWMOM
2009
ACM
143views Multimedia» more  WOWMOM 2009»
15 years 4 months ago
Improving partial cover of Random Walks in large-scale Wireless Sensor Networks
Random Walks (RWs) have been considered for information dissemination in large scale, dynamic and unstructured environments, as they are scalable, robust to topology changes and d...
Leonidas Tzevelekas, Ioannis Stavrakakis
ADHOCNOW
2009
Springer
14 years 11 months ago
On Minimizing the Maximum Sensor Movement for Barrier Coverage of a Line Segment
We consider n mobile sensors located on a line containing a barrier represented by a finite line segment. Sensors form a wireless sensor network and are able to move within the lin...
Jurek Czyzowicz, Evangelos Kranakis, Danny Krizanc...
ADHOCNOW
2010
Springer
14 years 11 months ago
Coverage-Adaptive Random Walks for Fast Sensory Data Collection
Random walks in wireless sensor networks can serve as fully local, very simple strategies for sink motion that reduce energy dissipation a lot but increase the latency of data coll...
Constantinos Marios Angelopoulos, Sotiris E. Nikol...
INFOCOM
2006
IEEE
15 years 3 months ago
Is Deterministic Deployment Worse than Random Deployment for Wireless Sensor Networks?
— Before a sensor network is deployed, it is important to determine how many sensors are required to achieve a certain coverage degree. The number of sensor required for maintain...
Honghai Zhang, Jennifer C. Hou