Rehab Shahin , Sherif M. Saif , Ali A. El-Moursy , Hazem M. Abbas , Salwa M. Nassar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) are one of the pillars of smart cities that enable smart traffic and smart mobility. Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs) are utilized as platforms for ITS applications. In VANETs, vehicles collect relevant information from sensors and exchange information about road conditions and traffic status with each other and with roadside units (RSUs). Roadside units facilitate reliable communication among the vehicles and perform real-time processing for the sensed data before sending to the cloud. Although cloud computing offers high performance computational and storage resources, it does not conform to the real-time nature of the ITS applications and the massive amount of data exchange and generation rate due to its centralized nature and high communication latency. In this paper we propose a cost-effective strategy to solve the configuration and localization problem of fog-based RSU deployment in VANETs. The proposed strategy is able to assign the computational capacity of each fog node based on the amount of computational demand inside its coverage region. The problem is formulated as a Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT) problem. Our proposed strategy is more efficient than other strategies in terms of the total deployment cost and the overall satisfied computational demand.
期刊介绍:
As envisioned by Mark Weiser as early as 1991, pervasive computing systems and services have truly become integral parts of our daily lives. Tremendous developments in a multitude of technologies ranging from personalized and embedded smart devices (e.g., smartphones, sensors, wearables, IoTs, etc.) to ubiquitous connectivity, via a variety of wireless mobile communications and cognitive networking infrastructures, to advanced computing techniques (including edge, fog and cloud) and user-friendly middleware services and platforms have significantly contributed to the unprecedented advances in pervasive and mobile computing. Cutting-edge applications and paradigms have evolved, such as cyber-physical systems and smart environments (e.g., smart city, smart energy, smart transportation, smart healthcare, etc.) that also involve human in the loop through social interactions and participatory and/or mobile crowd sensing, for example. The goal of pervasive computing systems is to improve human experience and quality of life, without explicit awareness of the underlying communications and computing technologies.
The Pervasive and Mobile Computing Journal (PMC) is a high-impact, peer-reviewed technical journal that publishes high-quality scientific articles spanning theory and practice, and covering all aspects of pervasive and mobile computing and systems.