DocumentCode
2769006
Title
Detection and tracking of dynamic amorphous events in wireless sensor networks
Author
Hubbell, Nicholas ; Han, Qi
Author_Institution
Lockheed Martin Corp., Littleton, CO, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
27-30 June 2011
Firstpage
170
Lastpage
178
Abstract
Wireless sensor networks may be deployed in many applications to detect and track events of interest. Events can be either point events with an exact location and constant shape, or region events which cover a large area and have dynamic shapes. While both types of events have received attention, no event detection and tracking protocol in existing wireless sensor network research is able to identify and track region events with dynamic shapes(NH-change shapes to identities), which arise when events are created or destroyed through splitting and merging. In this paper, we propose DRAGON, an event detection and tracking protocol which is able to handle all types of events including region events with dynamic identities. DRAGON employs two physics metaphors: event center of mass, to give an approximate location to the event; and node momentum, to guide the detection of event merges and splits. Both detailed theoretical analysis and extensive performance studies of DRAGON´s properties demonstrate that DRAGON´s execution is distributed among the sensor nodes, has low latency, is energy efficient, is able to run on a wide array of physical deployments, and has performance which scales well with event size, speed, and count.
Keywords
protocols; wireless sensor networks; DRAGON; detection protocol; dynamic amorphous detection; dynamic amorphous tracking; sensor nodes; tracking protocol; wireless sensor networks; Aggregates; Clustering algorithms; Image edge detection; Joints; Protocols; Sensors; Shape; energy efficiency; event tracking protocols; wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Sensor, Mesh and Ad Hoc Communications and Networks (SECON), 2011 8th Annual IEEE Communications Society Conference on
Conference_Location
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN
2155-5486
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0094-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SAHCN.2011.5984894
Filename
5984894
Link To Document