In this paper, the estimation of a scalar field over a bidimensional scenario (e.g., the atmospheric pressure in a wide area) through a self-organizing wireless sensor network (WSN) with energy constraints is investigated. The sensor devices (denoted as nodes) are randomly distributed; they transmit samples to a supervisor by using a clustered network. This paper provides a mathematical framework to analyze the interdependent aspects of WSN communication protocol and signal processing design. Channel modelling and connectivity issues, multiple access control and routing, and the role of distributed digital signal processing (DDSP) techniques are accounted for. The possibility that nodes perform DDSP is studied through a distributed compression technique based on signal resampling. The DDSP impact on network energy efficiency is compared through a novel mathematical approach to the case where the processing is performed entirely by the supervisor. The trade-off between energy conservation (i.e., network lifetime) and estimation error is discussed and a design criterion is proposed as well. Comparison to simulation outcomes validates the model. As an example result, the required node density is found as a trade-off between estimation quality and network lifetime for different system parameters and scalar field characteristics. It is shown that both the DDSP technique and the MAC protocol choice have a relevant impact on the performance of a WSN.

D. Dardari, A. Conti, C. Buratti, R. Verdone (2007). Mathematical Evaluation of Environmental Monitoring Estimation Error Through Energy-Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MOBILE COMPUTING, 6, 790-802 [10.1109/TMC.2007.1041].

Mathematical Evaluation of Environmental Monitoring Estimation Error Through Energy-Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks

DARDARI, DAVIDE;BURATTI, CHIARA;VERDONE, ROBERTO
2007

Abstract

In this paper, the estimation of a scalar field over a bidimensional scenario (e.g., the atmospheric pressure in a wide area) through a self-organizing wireless sensor network (WSN) with energy constraints is investigated. The sensor devices (denoted as nodes) are randomly distributed; they transmit samples to a supervisor by using a clustered network. This paper provides a mathematical framework to analyze the interdependent aspects of WSN communication protocol and signal processing design. Channel modelling and connectivity issues, multiple access control and routing, and the role of distributed digital signal processing (DDSP) techniques are accounted for. The possibility that nodes perform DDSP is studied through a distributed compression technique based on signal resampling. The DDSP impact on network energy efficiency is compared through a novel mathematical approach to the case where the processing is performed entirely by the supervisor. The trade-off between energy conservation (i.e., network lifetime) and estimation error is discussed and a design criterion is proposed as well. Comparison to simulation outcomes validates the model. As an example result, the required node density is found as a trade-off between estimation quality and network lifetime for different system parameters and scalar field characteristics. It is shown that both the DDSP technique and the MAC protocol choice have a relevant impact on the performance of a WSN.
2007
D. Dardari, A. Conti, C. Buratti, R. Verdone (2007). Mathematical Evaluation of Environmental Monitoring Estimation Error Through Energy-Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MOBILE COMPUTING, 6, 790-802 [10.1109/TMC.2007.1041].
D. Dardari; A. Conti; C. Buratti; R. Verdone
File in questo prodotto:
Eventuali allegati, non sono esposti

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/48408
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 123
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 104
social impact