• DocumentCode
    3777596
  • Title

    Exploring molecular distributed detection

  • Author

    Uri Rogers;Min-Sung Koh

  • Author_Institution
    School of Computing and Engineering Sciences, Eastern Washington University, Cheney, WA, 99004
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    153
  • Lastpage
    158
  • Abstract
    Chemical-exchange provides a fundamental mechanism by which microorganisms and biological cells communicate. Using this concept and the idea of biological sized nanomachines, this paper explores the detection of a undesired biological agent in a distributed setting. Distributed in the sense that the system information is dispersed across the nanomachines, each possessing limited communication capabilities. To study this problem, the molecular distributed detection system is divided into four major components. The first is the biological agent itself. The second is a collection of autonomous nano-sized sensors, capable of observing the environment, and releasing a certain type of communication molecule directly related to that observation. The third is an aqueous molecular transmission channel under drift, modeled using Brownian motion. The fourth is a fusion stage that collects the communication molecules and fuses this information to determine if a biological agent is present or not. Using this framework, we explore biological agent detection performance using optimal and suboptimal fusion rules in a parallel topology for diverse potential applications.
  • Keywords
    "Nanobioscience","Biological system modeling","Molecular communication","In vivo","Sensor fusion"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Nano/Molecular Medicine & Engineering (NANOMED), 2015 9th IEEE International Conference on
  • Electronic_ISBN
    2159-6972
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/NANOMED.2015.7492511
  • Filename
    7492511