Energy-efficient computing for wildlife tracking: design tradeoffs and early experiences with ZebraNet

ASPLOS X Pub Date : 2002-10-01 DOI:10.1145/605397.605408
Philo Juang, Hidekazu Oki, Yong Wang, M. Martonosi, L. Peh, D. Rubenstein
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引用次数: 2294

Abstract

Over the past decade, mobile computing and wireless communication have become increasingly important drivers of many new computing applications. The field of wireless sensor networks particularly focuses on applications involving autonomous use of compute, sensing, and wireless communication devices for both scientific and commercial purposes. This paper examines the research decisions and design tradeoffs that arise when applying wireless peer-to-peer networking techniques in a mobile sensor network designed to support wildlife tracking for biology research.The ZebraNet system includes custom tracking collars (nodes) carried by animals under study across a large, wild area; the collars operate as a peer-to-peer network to deliver logged data back to researchers. The collars include global positioning system (GPS), Flash memory, wireless transceivers, and a small CPU; essentially each node is a small, wireless computing device. Since there is no cellular service or broadcast communication covering the region where animals are studied, ad hoc, peer-to-peer routing is needed. Although numerous ad hoc protocols exist, additional challenges arise because the researchers themselves are mobile and thus there is no fixed base station towards which to aim data. Overall, our goal is to use the least energy, storage, and other resources necessary to maintain a reliable system with a very high `data homing' success rate. We plan to deploy a 30-node ZebraNet system at the Mpala Research Centre in central Kenya. More broadly, we believe that the domain-centric protocols and energy tradeoffs presented here for ZebraNet will have general applicability in other wireless and sensor applications.
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野生动物追踪的节能计算:ZebraNet的设计权衡和早期经验
在过去的十年中,移动计算和无线通信已经成为许多新的计算应用日益重要的驱动因素。无线传感器网络领域特别关注涉及自动使用计算、传感和无线通信设备的应用,用于科学和商业目的。本文研究了在移动传感器网络中应用无线点对点网络技术时出现的研究决策和设计权衡,该网络旨在支持生物学研究的野生动物跟踪。ZebraNet系统包括定制跟踪项圈(节点),这些项圈由被研究动物携带,跨越大片野生区域;项圈作为一个点对点网络运行,将记录的数据传回给研究人员。项圈包括全球定位系统(GPS)、闪存、无线收发器和小型CPU;实际上,每个节点都是一个小型的无线计算设备。由于没有蜂窝服务或广播通信覆盖动物研究的区域,因此需要特设的点对点路由。虽然存在许多特别协议,但由于研究人员本身是移动的,因此没有固定的基站来瞄准数据,因此出现了额外的挑战。总的来说,我们的目标是使用最少的能源、存储和其他必要的资源来维护一个可靠的系统,并具有非常高的“数据归巢”成功率。我们计划在肯尼亚中部的Mpala研究中心部署一个30个节点的ZebraNet系统。更广泛地说,我们相信这里为ZebraNet介绍的以领域为中心的协议和能量权衡将在其他无线和传感器应用中具有普遍适用性。
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