2004 IEEE International Conference on Communications (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37577) 2004
DOI: 10.1109/icc.2004.1313225
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Adaptive sleep discipline for energy conservation and robustness in dense sensor networks

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Cited by 37 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…In many scenarios of relevant interest, wireless multi-hop networks do not have fixed communication paths [11], but the end-to-end path followed by packets happens according to a dynamic selection of hops [12,13]. Indeed, it is often impossible to build fixed routing tables for these networks due to the time-varying communication channel and network topology.…”
Section: Wireless Multi-hop Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many scenarios of relevant interest, wireless multi-hop networks do not have fixed communication paths [11], but the end-to-end path followed by packets happens according to a dynamic selection of hops [12,13]. Indeed, it is often impossible to build fixed routing tables for these networks due to the time-varying communication channel and network topology.…”
Section: Wireless Multi-hop Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the same WSN, communication links are usually subject to different channel conditions [19]. Let's consider a n-link relay network model, where the source, relay and destination nodes form two wireless channels.…”
Section: Figure 4: Example Of a Multi-hop Relay Networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adaptive sleep (AS) technique, therefore, has been proposed so that node sleep times can be adjusted based on current fading conditions [16]. Most of the time when there is no communication, nodes are powered down and operated at the minimum power level.…”
Section: Energy Optimizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To overcome this problem, we follow the same approach proposed in [31], where an Additive Increase and Multiplicative Decrease (AIMD) algorithm leads to a fair distribution of the wake-up duties within a single cluster. Specifically, each node that is waiting to forward a data packet observes the time before the first wake-up in the forwarding region.…”
Section: Wake-up Rate and Radio Power Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some cross-layer design challenges of the physical, MAC, and network layers to minimize the energy consumption of WSNs have been surveyed in [29][30][31]. However, many of the cross-layer solutions proposed in the literature are hardly useful for the application domain we are targeting, because they require sophisticated processing resources, or instantaneous global network knowledge, which are out of the capabilities of real nodes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%