STeC: Exploiting Spatial and Temporal Correlation for Event-based Communication in WSNs
Abstract
Low-power wireless sensor networks have demonstrated their potential for the detection of rare events such as rockfalls and wildfires, where rapid reporting as well as long-term energy-efficient operation is vital. However, current systems require periodic synchronization to maintain network coordination, heavily rely on node placement or use costly long-range links to infrastructure. We present STeC, a novel wireless communication design that directly exploits the spatial and temporal correlation of signals from the sensed phenomenon to orchestrate event-based communication. We leverage the locality of a co-detection, where a physical event triggers multiple sensors quasi-simultaneously, to efficiently collect, characterize and report sensor data. This eliminates the overhead of periodic network activity and centralized control, resulting in more energy-efficient communication with a lower, more consistent detection latency. In doing so, we propose a fundamentally new approach to avoid the elementary conflict between duty cycle and latency requirements immanent to synchronous protocols by exploiting correlated sensor signals for networking. Experiments using real-world traces of a natural hazard detection application show that STeC reduces the detection latency by up to 87 % compared to standard single-hop communication and outperforms traditional schedule-based methods by up to 58.4 x in energy efficiency. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000514810Publication status
publishedExternal links
Book title
SenSys '21: Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor SystemsPages / Article No.
Publisher
Association for Computing MachineryEvent
Subject
Event-based sensing; Correlation; Wireless sensor networkOrganisational unit
03429 - Thiele, Lothar (emeritus) / Thiele, Lothar (emeritus)
Funding
180545 - NCCR Automation (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is supplemented by: https://doi.org/10.5905/ethz-1007-460
Is Documented by: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000515692
Notes
Conference lecture held on November 17, 2021More
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