DocumentCode :
1812177
Title :
Diverse Routing: Exploiting Social Behavior for Routing in Delay-Tolerant Networks
Author :
Zhou, Tong ; Choudhury, Romit Roy ; Chakrabarty, Krishnendu
Author_Institution :
ECE Dept., Duke Univ., Durham, NC, USA
Volume :
4
fYear :
2009
fDate :
29-31 Aug. 2009
Firstpage :
1115
Lastpage :
1122
Abstract :
Delay tolerant network (DTN) is an emerging research area that exploits user mobility for transporting information. While user mobility connects disconnected network components, it causes a large end to end communication latency. Towards reducing this latency, the habitual nature of human movements have been widely exploited for prediction-based routing protocols. We observe that while habitual mobility is useful in reducing the average communication latency, irregular deviation from habits can seriously affect worst-case performance. This paper motivates the need to address such deviations, characterizes their impact on latency, and addresses them through a protocol called diverse routing (DR). Evaluation of our protocol on a variety of real-life traces offers promising results. Experimental results reveal that DR provides efficient handling on worst-case latency, i.e., DR´s delivery delay is hardly affected by those irregular deviations, while it only incurs a moderate communication overhead. Moreover, DR can be easily tuned to meet different requirements of delivery delay and communication overhead.
Keywords :
mobile radio; routing protocols; average communication latency; delay-tolerant networks; diverse routing; habitual mobility; prediction-based routing protocols; social behavior; user mobility; Clustering algorithms; Communication system control; Computer networks; Delay; Disruption tolerant networking; Humans; Mobile communication; Routing protocols; Scattering; Social network services; delay-tolerant network; graph; routing; social cluster;
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.2009.357
Filename :
5283724
Link To Document :
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