Power Harvesting, Dynamic and Reliable Green Wireless Body Area Networks For Health Care Applications
Power Harvesting, Dynamic and Reliable Green Wireless Body Area Networks For Health Care Applications
Power Harvesting, Dynamic and Reliable Green Wireless Body Area Networks For Health Care Applications
a relaying structure improves energy consumption largely; effectively this distributes the
routing load over the entire network.
For WBAN, reliability and efficient resource management is not only important to
increase its life time but is also important as it is dealing with medical data critical to
health of patient. One of main problem that faces WBAN operator is the intra-WBAN
interference which results mainly from the fact that each bio-sensor collects a
different parameter with different data rate in different alternation. Another source of
intra-WBAN interferences is related to the regular movements of patient in his
environment. Indeed, in a motion such as walking, the body limbs move continuously
which results that the positions of the sensor nodes connected to them change related
to each other. Therefore, the decrease in the internodes distance may induce intrainterferences in case of a non-adapted transmission powers in bio-sensing nodes. In
literature few works have been considered intra-WBAN interference problem
[5][6][7][8].
More over, duty cycling has recently attracted considerable attention [13] [14]
due to its paramount importance on energy conservation in Wireless Body
Area Networks (WBANs). However, the existing protocols cannot operate
effectively under concurrent traffic especially in the health monitoring
applications. To bridge this gap, we present a novel two-phase receiverinitiated MAC protocol for Concurrent traffic based on asynchronous duty
cycling, called C-MAC. Technically, C-MAC designs an orderingbased
communication algorithm to effectively avoid collisions. Moreover, C-MAC
enables nodes to switch to Standby Mode (SBM) to avoid idle listening and
overhearing.
Research Work
As aforementioned Green WBAN will be a principal component in the pervasive
healthcare system, which is to provide healthcare anywhere and at anytime. It is very
important to support the large-scale application of Green WBAN. However, many
research groups work on an international standard on WBAN and focus their efforts
only on early deployment of WBAN. It is judicious to support in particular other axes.
An extremely low transmit power per node is needed to minimize interference and to
cope with health concerns. In addition, improvements are required on the co-channel
interference mitigation process, global power consumption and reliability.
In this work, student is encouraged to look at these issues to be improved and develop
new techniques and protocols for the next generation Green WBAN. Potential
research problems can be included as new multiuser access scheme.
The aim of this doctorate research work is to:
Make a state of art and analyze the performance, complexity and applicability
of existing methods (Duty Cycle, Power Harvesting and Dynamic Topology).
2
Identify, collect and evaluate the relevant network parameters that have
impacts on quality of scalable transmission over wireless sensors channels.
Design a mathematical model that can take into account the effects of all these
parameters on energy, quality and interferences (based on Mac Duty Cycle and
inference and learning algorithms: Bayesian networks, stochastic processes, neural
networks )
Required skills
1) A Masters degree in Computer Communications, Networking or related fields.
2) Good understanding of the fundamental of wireless and sensor communication,
3) Strong programming skills in: C, C++, MATLAB, NS2, etc.
4) Mathematical skills: knowledge in optimization theory, machine learning theory,
Bayesian networks, stochastic processes, etc.
Contact
Dr. Hassine Moungla - A. Professor
RMS Team - LIPADE Labs
Paris Descartes University
45 rue des Saints-Pres, 75270 Paris cedex 06
Phone : (+33) 1 83 94 58 06
Bibliography
[1] Anagha Jamthe, Amitabh Mishra, and Dharma P Agrawal. Scheduling schemes for
interference suppression in healthcare sensor networks. In Communications (ICC),
2014 IEEE International Conference on, pages 391396. IEEE, 2014.
[2] Jie Dong and David Smith. Opportunistic relaying in wireless body area networks:
Coexistence performance. In Communications (ICC), 2013 IEEE International
Conference on, pages 56135618. IEEE, 2013.
[3] Bahl, P.; Adya, A.; Padhye, J.; Walman, A. Reconsidering Wireless Systems with
Multiple Radios. ACM SIGCOMM Comput. Commun. Rev. 2004, 34, 3946.
[4] Friedman, R.; Kogan, A. Power Aware Management Middleware for Multiple Radio
Interfaces. In Proceedings of the 10th International Middleware Conference, Urbana,
IL, USA, 30 November4 December 2009; pp. 288307.
[5]. Qin, H.; Wang, Y.; Zhang, W. Zigbee-Assisted WiFi Transmission for Multi-Interface
Mobile Devices. In Proceedings of the 8th International ICST Conference, MobiQuitous
2011, Copenhagen, Denmark, 69 December 2011; pp. 248259
[6] J. N. Bae, et al., Efficient Interference Cancellation for Wireless Body Area Network,
Journal of Communication and Networks, Volume:13, Issue:2, pp. 167-174, April
2011.
[7] Jie Dong and David Smith. Joint relay selection and transmit power control for
wireless body area networks coexistence. In Communications (ICC), 2014 IEEE
International Conference on, pages 56765681. IEEE, 2014.
[9] S. Xiao, et al, Transmission power control in body area sensor networks for
healthcare monitoring, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications,
Volume:27, Issue:1, January 2009.
[10] R. Kazemi, et al, Inter-Network Interference Mitigation in Wireless Body Area
Networks Using Power Control Games, 10th International Symposium on
Communications and Information Technologies, Tokyo, Japan, October 2010.
[11] H. Moungla, N. Touati, A. Mehaoua: "Cost Efficient Deployment and Reliable
Routing Modeling based Multi-Objective Optimization for Dynamic Wireless Body
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