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Beyond Trilateration: On the Localizability of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

Beyond Trilateration: On the Localizability of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks. Reported by: 莫斌. Authors. Zheng Yang Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Yuhao Liu Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Xiang-Yang Li Illinois Institute of Technology. Outline.

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Beyond Trilateration: On the Localizability of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks

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  1. Beyond Trilateration: On the Localizability of Wireless Ad Hoc Networks Reported by: 莫斌 2011.06.01

  2. Authors Zheng Yang Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Yuhao Liu Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Xiang-Yang Li Illinois Institute of Technology

  3. Outline INTRODUCTION NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY NETWORK-WIDE LOCALIZABILITY PERFORMANCE EVALUATION CONCLUSION

  4. Supplementary Material • What is Trilateration? • Trilateration is proposed for testing localizability based on the fact that the location of an object can be determined if the distances to three references are known.

  5. Supplementary Material • What is Rigidity? • Rigidity is the property of a structure that it does not bend or flex under an applied force. The opposite of rigidity is flexibility.

  6. Supplementary Material • What is Connectivity of graph theory? • A cut, vertex cut, or separating set of a connected graph G is a set of vertices whose removal renders G disconnected. The connectivity is the size of a smallest vertex cut. • This means a graph G is said to be k-connected if there does not exist a set of k-1 vertices whose removal disconnects the graph.

  7. INTRODUCTION • The proliferation of wireless and mobile devices has fostered the demand of context-aware applications. • Location is one of the most essential contexts.

  8. INTRODUCTION • Beacons know their global locations and the rest determine their locations by measuring the Euclidean distances to their neighbors.

  9. INTRODUCTION • A wireless ad hoc network can be modeled by a distance graph G=(V, E, d). • A graph with possible additional constraint is called localizable if there is a unique location of every node.

  10. INTRODUCTION • A graph is called rigid if one cannot continuously deform the graph embedding in the plane while preserving the distance constraints. • A graph is redundantly rigid if the removal of any edge results in a graph that is still rigid.

  11. INTRODUCTION • A graph is globally rigid if there is a unique realization in the plane. • Jackson et al. prove that a graph is globally rigid if and only if it is 3-connected and redundantly rigid.

  12. INTRODUCTION • Global information is needed to test connectivity.

  13. INTRODUCTION • Trilatertion-based approaches. • Border nodes are often more critical in many applications.

  14. INTRODUCTION • A algorithm to find localizable nodes by testing whether they are included in some wheel graphs within their neighborhoods. • Using only local information, it is able to recognize all one-hop localizable nodes.

  15. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Lemma 1: The wheel graph Wnis globally rigid. • Proof: The graph Wn is redundantly rigid and 3-connected. Accordingly, it is globally rigid.

  16. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Conditions for Node Localizability • N[v] is a subgraph of Gncontaining only v and its one-hop (direct) neighbors and edges between them in Gn. • N(v) is obtained by removing v and all edges incident to v from N[v].

  17. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • if a vertex in N[v] is included in a wheel graph centered at v, it is localizable by given three beacons. • three localizable vertices in N[v]. • the hub and two rim vertices; • three rim vertices.

  18. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Vertex x belongs to a wheel structure in N[v] including two localizable vertices v1 and v2. • X lies on a cycle containing v1 and v2 in N(v).

  19. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • According to Dirac’s result, if a graph G is 3-connected, for any three vertices in G, G has a cycle including them. • If N(v)is 3-connected, all vertices are included in some wheels in N[v]. It’s too critical to be realistic.

  20. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • As we know, a 2-connected component in a graph G is a maximal subgraph of G without any articulation vertex whose removal will disconnect G. • For simplicity, we use blocks to denote 2-connected components.

  21. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Lemma 2: In a graph G with an edge (v1,v2), a vertex x belongs to the block B including v1 and v2if and only if it is on a cycle containing v1 and v2. • Sufficiency. B’ Is a block, and there are at least two vertex-disjoint paths between any two vertices. • Necessity. contradicting the maximality assumption of blocks.

  22. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Lemma 3: If a graph G is 2-connected, then G’ is globally rigid, where G’ is obtained by adding a vertex v0and edges between v0to all vertices in G. • We take an arbitrary edge(v1,v2) in G. every other vertex x in G is on a cycle containing v1 and v2by Lemma 2. • Since every wheel in G’ shares three vertices, all vertices are actually in the only one globally rigid component.

  23. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Note that not all blocks in N(v) are localizable.

  24. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Theorem 1: In a neighborhood graph N[v] with k (k>=3) localizable vertices vi (i=1,…,k and v=vk), a vertex (other than vi) belongs to a wheel structure with at least three localizable vertices if and only if it is included in the only (unique) block of N(v) that contains k-1 localizable vertices. • Sufficiency: According to Lemma 2. • Necessity: According to Lemma 2 and by adding vk back.

  25. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • So far, we achieve a necessary and sufficient condition for finding localizable vertices. • Trilateration is actually the minimum wheel graph with four vertices.

  26. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY

  27. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Is there any localizable vertex that is not included by any wheel in N[v]? • Lemma 4: In a graph G, if a vertex is uniquely localizable, it must have three vertex-disjoint paths to three distinct localizable vertices. • Theorem 2: (Correctness) In a neighborhood graph N[v], a vertex is marked by Algorithm 1 if and only if it is uniquely localizable in N[v].

  28. NEIGHBORHOOD LOCALIZABILITY • Proof for Theorem 2: • Sufficiency: Algorithm 1 finds wheel structures with at least three beacons in N[v]. According to Lemma 1. • Necessity: According to Lemma 4.

  29. NETWORK-WIDE LOCALIZABILITY • Lemma 5: The wheel extension is globally rigid. • The proof of Lemma 5 is straightforward. • Definition 1: A graph G is a wheel extension if there are the following: • three pairwise-connected vertices, say v1, v2and v3; • an ordering of remaining vertices as v4, v5,v6 …, such that any vi is included in a wheel graph (a subgraph of G) containing three early vertices in the sequence.

  30. NETWORK-WIDE LOCALIZABILITY

  31. NETWORK-WIDE LOCALIZABILITY • Analyze the time complexity of Algorithm 2 running on a graph G with n vertices. • O(n3) in dense graphs and O(n) in sparse graphs. • In practice, a wireless ad hoc network cannot be excessively dense because the communication links only exist between nearby nodes due to signal attenuation.

  32. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION • The localizability protocol is implemented on the hardware platform of the OceanSense project. • We equip five out of 60 nodes with GPS receivers and adopt the RSS-based ranging technique. • We collect a number of instances of the network topology from 8-h observation. • Trilateration (TRI) is chosen as a representative of all trilateration-based approaches.

  33. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION • Large-scale simulations are further conducted to examine the effectiveness and scalability of this design. • We generate networks of 400 nodes randomly, uniformly deployed in a unit square [0,1]2. • The unit disk model with a radius is adopted for communication and distance ranging. • For each evaluation, we integrate results from 100 network instances.

  34. r=0.15

  35. r=0.16

  36. CONCLUSION • Analyze the limitation of trilateration-based approaches. • Propose a novel approach, called WHEEL, based on globally rigid wheel graphs. • To validate this approach, a prototype system with tens of wireless sensors is deployed. • Large-scale simulations are further conducted to evaluate the scalability and efficiency.

  37. Thank You !

  38. NETWORK-WIDE LOCALIZABILITY • Definition 2: In a network, a node is k-hop localizable if it can be localized by using only the information of at most k-hop neighbors. • Theorem 3: In a graph G, a vertex is marked by Algorithm 2 if and only if it is one-hop localizable in G. • Sufficiency: Algorithm 2 marks a vertex if it is in a one-hop wheel with three localizable nodes. • Necessity: If a vertex x is one-hop localizable, it is included in a wheel with three localizable nodes by Theorem 2. thus x will be marked when Algorithm 1 is executed on the hub vertex.

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