| Literature DB >> 28661418 |
Xiaolan Tang1, Hua Xie2, Wenlong Chen3, Jianwei Niu4,5, Shuhang Wang6.
Abstract
Wireless sensor networks are required in smart applications to provide accurate control, where the high density of sensors brings in a large quantity of redundant data. In order to reduce the waste of limited network resources, data aggregation is utilized to avoid redundancy forwarding. However, most of aggregation schemes reduce information accuracy and prolong end-to-end delay when eliminating transmission overhead. In this paper, we propose a data aggregation scheme based on overlapping rate of sensing area, namely AggOR, aiming for energy-efficient data collection in wireless sensor networks with high information accuracy. According to aggregation rules, gathering nodes are selected from candidate parent nodes and appropriate neighbor nodes considering a preset threshold of overlapping rate of sensing area. Therefore, the collected data in a gathering area are highly correlated, and a large amount of redundant data could be cleaned. Meanwhile, AggOR keeps the original entropy by only deleting the duplicated data. Experiment results show that compared with others, AggOR has a high data accuracy and a short end-to-end delay with a similar network lifetime.Entities:
Keywords: data accuracy; data aggregation; overlapping rate of sensing area; wireless sensor networks
Year: 2017 PMID: 28661418 PMCID: PMC5539569 DOI: 10.3390/s17071527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Symbols.
| Symbol | Description |
|---|---|
| Sensing radius of a sensor node. | |
| Communication radius of a sensor node. | |
| Consumed energy of sending per unit data. | |
| Consumed energy of receiving per unit data. | |
| The size of data collected by a sensor node. | |
| Overlapping rate of sensing area of two nodes | |
| Threshold of overlapping rate of sensing area. | |
| Gathering area with | |
| Gathering node, which aggregates the data collected in a gathering area. | |
| Candidate gathering node set of | |
| Candidate parent node set of | |
| Neighbor node set of | |
| Level of | |
| The total amount of data transferred from | |
| The total amount of data received by | |
| The energy consumed for delivering aggregated data from the gathering node | |
| The total energy cost of the nodes in the gathering area | |
| The total energy cost of transmitting data of node | |
| Free nodes at the level |
Figure 1Transmission hierarchy diagram.
Figure 2Overlapping rate of sensing area.
Figure 3An instance of wireless sensor network (WSN) with three gathering areas.
Figure 4Gathering node selection for .
Figure 5An instance topology under construction.
Figure 6An example of AggOR implementation.
Simulation parameters.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Scenario (m | |
| Number of sink node | 1 |
| Number of sensor nodes, | 40, 80, 120, 160 and 200 |
| Sensing radius (m) | 25 |
| Communication radius (m) | 52 |
| Data collection cycle (s) | 60 |
| 0.5 |
Figure 7Experiment results. (a) network lifetime; (b) transmission overhead; (c) maximum hops to the sink; (d) information accuracy.
Figure 8Another definition of network lifetime.
Figure 9Results with different sensor densities. (a) network lifetime; (b) transmission overhead; (c) maximum hops to the sink; (d) information accuracy.
Figure 10Results with different . (a) network lifetime; (b) transmission overhead; (c) maximum hops to the sink.
Figure 11The numbers of gathering nodes in three scenarios. (a) Scenario SP; (b) Scenario SC; (c) Scenario SS.
Figure 12The numbers of independent nodes in three scenarios. (a) Scenario SP; (b) Scenario SC; (c) Scenario SS.
Figure 13Sketch maps of three scenarios. (a) Scenario SP; (b) Scenario SC; (c) Scenario SS.