DocumentCode
26995
Title
Opportunistic Communication and Human Mobility
Author
Helgason, Olafur ; Kouyoumdjieva, Sylvia T. ; Karlsson, Gunnar
Author_Institution
Linnaeus Centre & Electr. Eng., KTH ACCESS, Stockholm, Sweden
Volume
13
Issue
7
fYear
2014
fDate
Jul-14
Firstpage
1597
Lastpage
1610
Abstract
Many mobility models currently used for evaluating wireless communication systems have weak resemblance to reality and there is a lack of understanding on which characteristics of human mobility affect system performance. In particular, most current mobility models assume a free flow of nodes and do not consider how mobility is affected by interactions with other persons and with the physical environment. They also assume a closed system, not considering the effect of node arrival and departure. The structure of space in which the mobility occurs is either not considered at all, or only in a limited way. In this work, we address human pedestrian mobility for evaluation of wireless communication to determine which of the aforementioned aspects need to be captured and to what level of detail. We focus on opportunistic communication in the form of ad-hoc and delay-tolerant networks. For the evaluation, we use mobility models from the field of transportation and urban planning that are used for designing and dimensioning public spaces for comfort and safety of pedestrians in rush hour and emergency evacuation. The models capture micro-mobility of pedestrians better than most mobility models used in mobile networking since the application domain requires realistic representation of node interactions with the physical environment and with other nodes. Our results show that the free flow assumption used in most models does not have a significant performance impact. We also conclude that performance is not very sensitive to accurate estimation of the probability distributions of mobility parameters such as speed and arrival process. Our results, however, suggest that it is important to capture the scenario and space in which mobility occurs since these may affect performance significantly.
Keywords
ad hoc networks; delay tolerant networks; mobility management (mobile radio); pedestrians; probability; ad-hoc networks; application domain; closed system; delay-tolerant networks; free flow assumption; human pedestrian mobility; micromobility; mobile networking; mobility models; mobility parameters; node arrival; node departure; node interactions; opportunistic communication; physical environment; probability distributions; public spaces; transportation; urban planning; wireless communication systems; Ad hoc networks; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Measurement; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Wireless communication; Communication/Networking and Information Technology; Computer Systems; Mobile Computing; Mobile communication systems; Mobile environments; Mobility models; Wireless communication; opportunistic networking; wireless systems;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1233
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMC.2013.160
Filename
6684528
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