DocumentCode
893127
Title
An Energy-Efficient Data Collection Framework for Wireless Sensor Networks by Exploiting Spatiotemporal Correlation
Author
Liu, Chong ; Wu, Kui ; Pei, Jian
Author_Institution
Victoria Univ., Victoria
Volume
18
Issue
7
fYear
2007
fDate
7/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1010
Lastpage
1023
Abstract
Limited energy supply is one of the major constraints in wireless sensor networks. A feasible strategy is to aggressively reduce the spatial sampling rate of sensors, that is, the density of the measure points in a field. By properly scheduling, we want to retain the high fidelity of data collection. In this paper, we propose a data collection method that is based on a careful analysis of the surveillance data reported by the sensors. By exploring the spatial correlation of sensing data, we dynamically partition the sensor nodes into clusters so that the sensors in the same cluster have similar surveillance time series. They can share the workload of data collection in the future since their future readings may likely be similar. Furthermore, during a short-time period, a sensor may report similar readings. Such a correlation in the data reported from the same sensor is called temporal correlation, which can be explored to further save energy. We develop a generic framework to address several important technical challenges, including how to partition the sensors into clusters, how to dynamically maintain the clusters in response to environmental changes, how to schedule the sensors in a cluster, how to explore temporal correlation, and how to restore the data in the sink with high fidelity. We conduct an extensive empirical study to test our method using both a real test bed system and a large-scale synthetic data set.
Keywords
correlation methods; wireless sensor networks; energy-efficient data collection framework; large-scale synthetic data set; real test bed system; spatiotemporal correlation; wireless sensor networks; Energy efficiency; Sampling methods; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Spatial resolution; Spatiotemporal phenomena; Surveillance; System testing; Temperature sensors; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; Energy efficiency; data collection; spatiotemporal correlation; wireless sensor networks.;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPDS.2007.1046
Filename
4218579
Link To Document