DocumentCode :
589557
Title :
Analysis of distributed algorithms for density estimation in VANETs (Poster)
Author :
Akhtar, Naheed ; Ergen, Sinem Coleri ; Ozkasap, Oznur
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Eng., Koc Univ., Istanbul, Turkey
fYear :
2012
fDate :
14-16 Nov. 2012
Firstpage :
157
Lastpage :
164
Abstract :
Vehicle density is an important system metric used in monitoring road traffic conditions. Most of the existing methods for vehicular density estimation require either building an infrastructure, such as pressure pads, inductive loop detector, roadside radar, cameras and wireless sensors, or using a centralized approach based on counting the number of vehicles in a particular geographical location via clustering or grouping mechanisms. These techniques however suffer from low reliability and limited coverage as well as high deployment and maintenance cost. In this paper, we propose fully distributed and infrastructure-free mechanisms for the density estimation in vehicular ad hoc networks. Unlike previous distributed approaches, that either rely on group formation, or on vehicle flow and speed information to calculate density, our study is inspired by the mechanisms proposed for system size estimation in peer-to-peer networks. We adapted and implemented three fully distributed algorithms, namely Sample & Collide, Hop Sampling and Gossip-based Aggregation. The extensive simulations of these algorithms at different vehicle traffic densities and area sizes for both highways and urban areas reveal that Hop Sampling provides the highest accuracy in least convergence time and introduces least overhead on the network, but at the cost of higher load on the initiator node.
Keywords :
distributed algorithms; peer-to-peer computing; road traffic; telecommunication network reliability; vehicular ad hoc networks; VANET; cameras; centralized approach; distributed algorithms; geographical location; gossip-based aggregation; group formation; grouping mechanisms; hop sampling; inductive loop detector; infrastructure-free mechanisms; peer-to-peer networks; pressure pads; reliability; road traffic condition monitoring; roadside radar; vehicle traffic density; vehicular ad hoc networks; vehicular density estimation; wireless sensors; Estimation; Heuristic algorithms; Peer to peer computing; Roads; Urban areas; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Vehicular Networking Conference (VNC), 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seoul
ISSN :
2157-9857
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4995-6
Electronic_ISBN :
2157-9857
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/VNC.2012.6407425
Filename :
6407425
Link To Document :
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