DocumentCode
1732963
Title
Identifying Connectors and Communities: Understanding Their Impacts on the Performance of a DTN Publish/Subscribe System
Author
Chuah, M. ; Coman, Alexandra
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Lehigh Univ., Bethlehem, PA, USA
Volume
4
fYear
2009
Firstpage
1093
Lastpage
1098
Abstract
Mobile devices carried by people are dynamically networked. Understanding the social structures within the human mobility traces captured from the mobile devices help us design efficient message dissemination schemes. Furthermore, community is an important attribute of future human contact-based networks. People who are in multiple communities are good message carriers. Thus, a distributed community detection scheme that can identify different communities efficiently from the various communication traces e.g. users´ emails, human mobility traces is very useful. In this paper, we first identify nodes that can play key roles from some real-world human mobility and email traces using the traditional social network metrics. Then, we investigate the usefulness of several community extraction schemes that can handle both email and contact traces. Last but not least, we demonstrate how the connector identification helps to improve the performance of a DTN publish/subscribe system.
Keywords
message passing; middleware; mobile computing; mobile handsets; social networking (online); software metrics; DTN publish-subscribe system; community extraction schemes; community identification; connectors identification; distributed community detection scheme; mobile devices; real world human mobility; social network metrics; Connectors; Contacts; Data mining; Design engineering; Disruption tolerant networking; Humans; Information retrieval; Mobile communication; Peer to peer computing; Social network services; communities; connectors; disruption tolerant networks; human mobility traces;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computational Science and Engineering, 2009. CSE '09. International Conference on
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5334-4
Electronic_ISBN
978-0-7695-3823-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSE.2009.284
Filename
5282983
Link To Document