Title :
Wireless Sensor Networking: The Pleasure and the Pain
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput., Imperial Coll. London, London, UK
Abstract :
The demand for highly lightweight decentralised self-management of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) has lead to the pursuit of emergent and bio-inspired solutions. I will introduce the WSN field briefly and highlight the aspects that differentiate it from ´normal´ computing. I then present some of the research we have been doing in this field for decentralised network control and emergent systems management. Many of the algorithms produced to manage a WSN focus on one managerial aspect or parameter, limiting their usefulness and consuming already scarce resources. We have identified sets of common structures and elements of many well-known emergent algorithms. I present examples that exploit this to efficiently manage more than one managerial parameter or aspect. However, I also show how established evaluation methodologies are extremely misleading as when implementing the systems on actual devices we soon find some very unexpected results. I discuss this phenomenon, suggest causes and make some suggestions regarding the engineering of WSNs.
Keywords :
distributed processing; wireless sensor networks; WSN; decentralised network control; emergent systems management; lightweight decentralised self-management; wireless sensor networking; Biosensors; Computer architecture; Computer networks; Conferences; Educational institutions; Pain; Resource management; Sensor systems; Systems engineering and theory; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering of Computer Based Systems (ECBS), 2010 17th IEEE International Conference and Workshops on
Conference_Location :
Oxford
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6537-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6538-5
DOI :
10.1109/ECBS.2010.61