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M-Dimension : multi-characteristics based routing protocol in human associated delay-tolerant networks with improved performance over one dimensional classic models

journal contribution
posted on 2012-07-01, 00:00 authored by Longxiang GaoLongxiang Gao, Ming Li, Alessio Bonti, Wanlei Zhou, Shui Yu
Human associated delay-tolerant network (HDTN) is a new delay-tolerant network where mobile devices are associated with humans. It can be viewed from both their geographic and social dimensions. The combination of these different dimensions can enable us to more accurately comprehend a delay-tolerant network and consequently use this multi-dimensional information to improve overall network efficiency. Alongside the geographic dimension of the network which is concerned with geographic topology of routing, social dimensions such as social hierarchy can be used to guide the routing message to improve not only the routing efficiency for individual nodes, but also efficiency for the entire network.

We propose a multi-dimensional routing protocol (M-Dimension) for the human associated delay-tolerant network which uses the local information derived from multiple dimensions to identify a mobile node more accurately. Each dimension has a weight factor and is organized by the Distance Function to select an intermediary and applies multi-cast routing. We compare M-Dimension to existing benchmark routing protocols using the MIT Reality Dataset, a well-known benchmark dataset based on a human associated mobile network trace file. The results of our simulations show that M-Dimension has a significant increase in the average success ratio and is very competitive when End-to-End Delay of packet delivery is used in comparison to other multi-cast DTN routing protocols.

History

Journal

Journal of network and computer applications

Volume

35

Pagination

1285 - 1296

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1084-8045

eISSN

1095-8592

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Elsevier