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Evaluating interpolation-based power management
Author(s)
Date Issued
2008-12
Date Available
2009-06-17T16:13:20Z
Abstract
Power management for WSNs can take many forms, from adaptively tuning the power consumption of some of the components of a node to hibernating it completely. In the later case, the competence of the WSN must not be compromised. In general, the competence of a WSN is its ability to perform its function in an accurate and timely fashion. These two, related, Quality of Service (QoS) metrics are primarily affected by the density and latency of data from the environment, respectively.Without adequate density, interesting events may not
be adequately observed or missed completely by the application, while stale data could result in event detection occurring too
late. In opposition to this is the fact that the energy consumed by the network is related to the number of active nodes in the
deployment. Therefore, given that the nodes have finite power resources, a trade-off exists between the longevity and QoS
provided by the network and it is crucial that both aspects are considered when evaluating a power management protocol.
In this paper, a novel node hibernation technique based on interpolated sensor readings is analysed according to these four
metrics: energy consumption, density, message latency and the accuracy of an application utilising the data from the WSN. A comparison with a standard WSN that does not engage in power management is also presented, in order to show the overhead in
the protocols operation.
be adequately observed or missed completely by the application, while stale data could result in event detection occurring too
late. In opposition to this is the fact that the energy consumed by the network is related to the number of active nodes in the
deployment. Therefore, given that the nodes have finite power resources, a trade-off exists between the longevity and QoS
provided by the network and it is crucial that both aspects are considered when evaluating a power management protocol.
In this paper, a novel node hibernation technique based on interpolated sensor readings is analysed according to these four
metrics: energy consumption, density, message latency and the accuracy of an application utilising the data from the WSN. A comparison with a standard WSN that does not engage in power management is also presented, in order to show the overhead in
the protocols operation.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Publisher
IEEE Press
Copyright (Published Version)
2008, IEEE
Subject – LCSH
Wireless sensor networks--Energy consumption
Interpolation
Wireless sensor networks--Quality control
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Journal
2008 International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Processing with Applications (ISPA-08)
Conference Details
International Workshop on Adaptation in Wireless Sensor Networks (AWSN-08), held in conjunction with the 2008 IEEE International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Processing with Applications (ISPA-08), December 10th -12th , 2008, Sydney
ISBN
978-0-7695-3471-8
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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tynan_evaluating.pdf
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Format
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