DocumentCode
3548009
Title
CARE: Coverage-aware connectivity restoration algorithm for mobile actor/robot networks
Author
Haider, N. ; Imran, Muhammad ; Saad, N.M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Univ. Teknol. PETRONAS, Bandar Seri Iskandar, Malaysia
fYear
2013
fDate
29-31 Aug. 2013
Firstpage
439
Lastpage
444
Abstract
Maintaining coverage-aware connectivity is extremely crucial for successful operation of mobile actor/robot networks as mobile nodes have to collaborate on the data received from sensors and perform coordinated action. However, failure of a critical node (i.e., cut vertex) may introduce a coverage hole besides partitioning the network into disjoint segments, and thus disrupts the operation. Most of the published schemes are reactive, require additional placement of nodes and only concentrate on restoring connectivity. Mission-critical time-sensitive applications crave an instantaneous self-healing recovery with minimum overhead. This paper presents a localized and hybrid coverage-aware connectivity restoration (CARE) algorithm which opts to rejuvenate lost connected coverage while minimizing recovery overhead. The design philosophy of CARE is based on “caretaker” theory. CARE proactively segregates critical/non-critical nodes, designates appropriate caretaker to each critical node in order to minimize recovery delay and avoid overreacting against non-critical node failure. CARE prefers to nominate a highly connected non-critical neighbor with highest overlapped coverage to minimize the repercussions and scope of recovery. The pre-designated guardian detects the failure and instigates a recovery that may involve controlled and coordinated multi-node relocation. Simulation results confirm the effectiveness and efficiency of CARE compared to contemporary schemes found in the literature.
Keywords
mobile radio; robots; wireless sensor networks; CARE; caretaker theory; coverage-aware connectivity restoration algorithm; mission-critical time-sensitive applications; mobile actor/robot networks; mobile nodes; multinode relocation; self-healing recovery; Algorithm design and analysis; Peer-to-peer computing; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Topology; Mobile actor/robot networks; coordinated multi-node relocation; coverage-aware connectivity restoration; fault-tolerance;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications (APCC), 2013 19th Asia-Pacific Conference on
Conference_Location
Denpasar
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-6048-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/APCC.2013.6765985
Filename
6765985
Link To Document