Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
506460 Computers, Environment and Urban Systems 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) play an important role in forest fire risk monitoring. Various applications are in operation. However, the use of mobile sensors in forest risk monitoring remains largely unexplored. Our research contributes to fill this gap by designing a model which abstracts mobility constraints within different types of contexts for the inference of mobile sensor behaviour. This behaviour is focused on achieving a suitable spatial coverage of the WSN when monitoring forest fire risk. The proposed mobility constraint model makes use of a Bayesian network approach and consists of three components: (1) a context typology describing different contexts in which a WSN monitors a dynamic phenomenon; (2) a context graph encoding probabilistic dependencies among variables of interest; and (3) contextual rules encoding expert knowledge and application requirements needed for the inference of sensor behaviour. As an illustration, the model is used to simulate the behaviour of a mobile WSN to obtain a suitable spatial coverage in low and high fire risk scenarios. It is shown that the implemented Bayesian network within the mobility constraint model can successfully infer behaviour such as sleeping sensors, moving sensors, or deploying more sensors to enhance spatial coverage. Furthermore, the mobility constraint model contributes towards mobile sensing in which the mobile sensor behaviour is driven by constraints on the state of the phenomenon and the sensing system.

► Mobility constraint model designed using a Bayesian network approach. ► Mobility constraint model = context typology + context graph + contextual rules. ► Mobility constraints for forest fire risk monitoring within different types of contexts. ► Inference of mobile sensor behaviour to enhance spatial coverage of fire risk. ► Simulations of low and high fire risk scenarios confirmed the usefulness of the model.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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