• DocumentCode
    39273
  • Title

    Energy Consumption of Visual Sensor Networks: Impact of Spatio-Temporal Coverage

  • Author

    Redondi, Alessandro ; Buranapanichkit, Dujdow ; Cesana, Matteo ; Tagliasacchi, M. ; Andreopoulos, Yiannis

  • Author_Institution
    Dipt. di Elettron., Inf. e Bioingegneria, Politec. di Milano, Milan, Italy
  • Volume
    24
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Dec. 2014
  • Firstpage
    2117
  • Lastpage
    2131
  • Abstract
    Wireless visual sensor networks (VSNs) are expected to play a major role in future IEEE 802.15.4 personal area networks (PANs) under recently established collision-free medium access control (MAC) protocols, such as the IEEE 802.15.4e-2012 MAC. In such environments, the VSN energy consumption is affected by a number of camera sensors deployed (spatial coverage), as well as a number of captured video frames of which each node processes and transmits data (temporal coverage). In this paper we explore this aspect for uniformly formed VSNs, that is, networks comprising identical wireless visual sensor nodes connected to a collection node via a balanced cluster-tree topology, with each node producing independent identically distributed bitstream sizes after processing the video frames captured within each network activation interval. We derive analytic results for the energy-optimal spatio-temporal coverage parameters of such VSNs under a priori known bounds for the number of frames to process per sensor and the number of nodes to deploy within each tier of the VSN. Our results are parametric to the probability density function characterizing the bitstream size produced by each node and the energy consumption rates of the system of interest. Experimental results are derived from a deployment of TelosB motes and reveal that our analytic results are always within 7% of the energy consumption measurements for a wide range of settings. In addition, results obtained via motion JPEG encoding and feature extraction on a multimedia subsystem (BeagleBone Linux Computer) show that the optimal spatio-temporal settings derived by our framework allow for substantial reduction of energy consumption in comparison with ad hoc settings.
  • Keywords
    Zigbee; access protocols; feature extraction; image coding; wireless sensor networks; BeagleBone Linux Computer; IEEE 802.15.4 personal area networks; MAC protocols; PAN; balanced cluster-tree topology; collision-free medium access control protocols; energy consumption; energy-optimal spatio-temporal coverage parameters; feature extraction; motion JPEG encoding; multimedia subsystem; probability density function; spatio-temporal coverage impact; wireless visual sensor networks; Cameras; Energy consumption; Multimedia communication; Relays; Streaming media; Topology; Visualization; Energy consumption; IEEE 802.15.4; Internet-of-things (IoT); frame rate; sensor coverage; visual sensor networks (VSNs);
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Circuits and Systems for Video Technology, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1051-8215
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TCSVT.2014.2329378
  • Filename
    6826561