Data di Pubblicazione:
2007
Abstract:
Decentralized detection in a network of wireless
sensor nodes involves the fusion of information about a phenomenon
of interest (PoI) from geographically dispersed nodes.
In this paper, we investigate the problem of binary decentralized
detection in a dense and randomly deployed wireless sensor
network (WSN), whereby the communication channels between
the nodes and the fusion center are bandwidth-constrained. We
consider a scenario in which sensor observations, conditioned on
the alternate hypothesis, are independent but not identically distributed
across the sensor nodes.We compare two different fusion
architectures, namely, the parallel fusion architecture (PFA) and
the cooperative fusion architecture (CFA), for such bandwidthconstrained
WSNs, where each sensor node is restricted to send
a 1-bit information to the fusion center. For each architecture,
we derive expression for the probability of decision error at the
fusion center. We propose a consensus flooding protocol for CFA
and analyze its average energy consumption. We analyze the
effects of PoI intensity, realistic link models, consensus flooding
protocol, and network connectivity on the system reliability and
average energy consumption for both fusion architectures. We
demonstrate that a trade-off exists among spatial diversity gain,
average energy consumption, delivery ratio of the consensus
flooding protocol, network connectivity, node density, and PoI
intensity in CFA. We then provide insight into the design of
cooperative WSNs.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Wireless sensor network; cooperative diversity; energy efficiency; decentralized detection
Elenco autori:
Dardari, Davide
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