The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. ex. Some numerals are expressed as "XNUMX".
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The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. Copyrights notice
Dans cet article, nous considérons un système multi-sauts mobile, multimédia (M3) réseau ad hoc. Les principales caractéristiques de ce système sont la mobilité des utilisateurs, les contraintes énergétiques et la nécessité de fonctionner sans infrastructure fixe (filaire ou sans fil). Dans cet environnement, avec l'avènement des communications multimédias, l'utilisation de l'architecture cluster a été revisitée pour prendre en charge la réservation de ressources et le routage de qualité de service. Nous avons proposé un protocole de clustering basé sur l'accès (ABCP) qui permet au réseau de s'auto-organiser en une architecture de cluster. Trois avantages sont revendiqués par l'ABCP. Premièrement, grâce au critère basé sur l'accès, il minimise la surcharge liée à la formation du cluster afin que le protocole ait un temps d'exécution court et une bonne évolutivité. Deuxièmement, ABCP unifie les algorithmes d'initialisation et de maintenance du cluster, c'est-à-dire que le même ensemble de fonctions de clustering est utilisé par un nœud, qu'il vienne juste de devenir actif ou qu'il quitte son cluster actuel. Troisièmement, les résultats de simulation démontrent que la structure du cluster se comporte de manière stable lors des changements de topologie par rapport aux techniques proposées précédemment. Outre le critère basé sur l'accès, un schéma d'accès multiple est également proposé pour la diffusion de messages de contrôle.
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Ting-Chao HOU, Tzu-Jane TSAI, "Distributed Clustering for Multimedia Support in Mobile Multihop Ad Hoc Networks" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications,
vol. E84-B, no. 4, pp. 760-770, April 2001, doi: .
Abstract: In this paper, we consider a mobile, multimedia, multihop (M3) ad hoc network. Key characteristics of this system are the mobility of users, energy constraints, and the need to operate without a fixed (wired or wireless) infrastructure. In this environment, with the advent of multimedia communications, the use of the cluster architecture has been revisited to support the resource reservation and Quality-of-Service routing. We proposed an access-based clustering protocol (ABCP) that allows the network to self-organize into a cluster architecture. Three advantages are claimed by ABCP. First, by the access-based criterion, it minimizes the overhead on cluster formation so that the protocol has short execution time and good scalability. Second, ABCP unifies the algorithms for cluster initialization and maintenance, i.e., the same set of clustering functions are used by a node regardless of whether it just becomes active or is in leaving its current cluster. Third, simulation results demonstrate that the cluster structure behaves stably amid topology changes compared with techniques previously proposed. Together with the access-based criterion, a multiple access scheme is also proposed for the broadcast of control messages.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/communications/10.1587/e84-b_4_760/_p
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@ARTICLE{e84-b_4_760,
author={Ting-Chao HOU, Tzu-Jane TSAI, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications},
title={Distributed Clustering for Multimedia Support in Mobile Multihop Ad Hoc Networks},
year={2001},
volume={E84-B},
number={4},
pages={760-770},
abstract={In this paper, we consider a mobile, multimedia, multihop (M3) ad hoc network. Key characteristics of this system are the mobility of users, energy constraints, and the need to operate without a fixed (wired or wireless) infrastructure. In this environment, with the advent of multimedia communications, the use of the cluster architecture has been revisited to support the resource reservation and Quality-of-Service routing. We proposed an access-based clustering protocol (ABCP) that allows the network to self-organize into a cluster architecture. Three advantages are claimed by ABCP. First, by the access-based criterion, it minimizes the overhead on cluster formation so that the protocol has short execution time and good scalability. Second, ABCP unifies the algorithms for cluster initialization and maintenance, i.e., the same set of clustering functions are used by a node regardless of whether it just becomes active or is in leaving its current cluster. Third, simulation results demonstrate that the cluster structure behaves stably amid topology changes compared with techniques previously proposed. Together with the access-based criterion, a multiple access scheme is also proposed for the broadcast of control messages.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={April},}
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TY - JOUR
TI - Distributed Clustering for Multimedia Support in Mobile Multihop Ad Hoc Networks
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SP - 760
EP - 770
AU - Ting-Chao HOU
AU - Tzu-Jane TSAI
PY - 2001
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SN -
VL - E84-B
IS - 4
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Y1 - April 2001
AB - In this paper, we consider a mobile, multimedia, multihop (M3) ad hoc network. Key characteristics of this system are the mobility of users, energy constraints, and the need to operate without a fixed (wired or wireless) infrastructure. In this environment, with the advent of multimedia communications, the use of the cluster architecture has been revisited to support the resource reservation and Quality-of-Service routing. We proposed an access-based clustering protocol (ABCP) that allows the network to self-organize into a cluster architecture. Three advantages are claimed by ABCP. First, by the access-based criterion, it minimizes the overhead on cluster formation so that the protocol has short execution time and good scalability. Second, ABCP unifies the algorithms for cluster initialization and maintenance, i.e., the same set of clustering functions are used by a node regardless of whether it just becomes active or is in leaving its current cluster. Third, simulation results demonstrate that the cluster structure behaves stably amid topology changes compared with techniques previously proposed. Together with the access-based criterion, a multiple access scheme is also proposed for the broadcast of control messages.
ER -