4th International ICST Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc, and Wireless Networks

Research Article

Distributed Symmetric Function Computation in Noisy Wireless Sensor Networks with Binary Data

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/WIOPT.2006.1666455,
        author={Lei  Ying and  R.  Srikant and Geir E.  Dullerud},
        title={Distributed Symmetric Function Computation in Noisy Wireless Sensor Networks with Binary Data},
        proceedings={4th International ICST Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc, and Wireless Networks},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={WIOPT},
        year={2006},
        month={8},
        keywords={},
        doi={10.1109/WIOPT.2006.1666455}
    }
    
  • Lei Ying
    R. Srikant
    Geir E. Dullerud
    Year: 2006
    Distributed Symmetric Function Computation in Noisy Wireless Sensor Networks with Binary Data
    WIOPT
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/WIOPT.2006.1666455
Lei Ying1,*, R. Srikant1,*, Geir E. Dullerud1,*
  • 1: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
*Contact email: lying@uiuc.edu, rsrikant@uiuc.edu, dullerud@uiuc.edu

Abstract

We consider a wireless sensor network consisting of n sensors, each having a recorded bit, the sensor’s measurement, which has been set to either “0” or “1”. The network has a special node called the fusion center whose goal is to compute a symmetric function of these bits; i.e., a function that depends only on the number of sensors that have a “1.” The sensors convey information to the fusion center in a multi-hop fashion to enable the function computation. The problem studied is to minimize the total transmission energy used by the network when computing this function, subject to the constraint that this computation is correct with high probability. We assume the wireless channels are binary symmetric channels with a probability of error p, and that each sensor uses rαunits of energy to transmit each bit, where r is the transmission range of the sensor. The main result in this paper is an algorithm whose energy usage is Θ (n(loglogn)(√logn/n)α), and we also show that any algorithm satisfying the performance constraints must necessarily have energy usage Ω (n(√logn/n)α). Then, we consider the case where the sensor network observes N events, and each node records one bit per event, thus having N bits to convey. The fusion center now wants to compute N symmetric functions, one for each of the events.