4.5 Article

The impact of spatial correlation on routing with compression in wireless sensor networks

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON SENSOR NETWORKS
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/1387663.1387670

Keywords

design; performance; sensor networks; correlated data gathering; analytical modeling

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The efficacy of data aggregation in sensor networks is a function of the degree of spatial correlation in the sensed phenomenon. The recent literature has examined a variety of schemes that achieve greater data aggregation by routing data with regard to the underlying spatial correlation. A well known conclusion from these papers is that the nature of optimal routing with compression depends on the correlation level. In this article we show the existence of a simple, practical, and static correlation-unaware clustering scheme that satisfies a min-max near-optimality condition. The implication for system design is that a static correlation-unaware scheme can perform as well as sophisticated adaptive schemes for joint routing and compression.

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