Title :
Employing the flocking behavior of birds for controlling congestion in autonomous decentralized networks
Author :
Antoniou, Pavlos ; Pitsillides, Andreas ; Blackwell, Tim ; Engelbrecht, Andries
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Cyprus, Nicosia
Abstract :
Recently a great emphasis has been given on autonomous decentralized networks (ADNs) wherein constituent nodes carry out specific tasks collectively. Their dynamic and constrained nature along with the emerging need for offering quality of service (QoS) assurances drive the necessity for effective network control mechanisms. This study focuses on designing a robust and self-adaptable congestion control mechanism which aims to be simple to implement at the individual node, and involve minimal information exchange, while maximizing network lifetime and providing QoS assurances. Our approach combats congestion by mimicking the collective behavior of bird flocks having global self-* properties achieved collectively without explicitly programming them into individual nodes. The main idea is to dasiaguidepsila packets (birds) to form flocks and flow towards the sink (global attractor), whilst trying to avoid congestion regions (obstacles). Unlike the bio-swarm approach of Couzin, which is formulated on a metrical space, our approach is reformulated on to a topological space (graph of nodes), while repulsion/attraction forces manipulate the direction of motion of packets. Our approach provides sink direction discovery, congestion detection and traffic management in ADNs with emphasis on Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Performance evaluations show the effectiveness of our self-adaptable mechanism in balancing the offered load and in providing graceful performance degradation under high load scenarios compared to typical conventional approaches.
Keywords :
quality of service; telecommunication congestion control; Couzin; QoS assurance; autonomous decentralized networks; bioswarm approach; bird flocks; birds flocking behavior; congestion detection; information exchange; metrical space; network control mechanism; network lifetime; quality of service; self-adaptable congestion control mechanism; self-adaptable mechanism; sink direction discovery; topological space; traffic management; wireless sensor networks; Birds; Convergence; Displays; Genetic algorithms; Optimization methods; Particle swarm optimization; Simulated annealing; Space exploration;
Conference_Titel :
Evolutionary Computation, 2009. CEC '09. IEEE Congress on
Conference_Location :
Trondheim
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2958-5
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2959-2
DOI :
10.1109/CEC.2009.4983153