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