Experimental Analysis of Cross-Layer Optimization for Distributed Wireless Body-to-Body Networks
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Authors
Shimly, Samiya
Smith, David
Movassaghigilani, Seyedehsamaneh
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Volume Title
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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE Inc)
Abstract
We investigate the performance of cross-layer
optimized routing across distributed wireless body-to-body networks (BBNs), based on real-life experimental measurements.
Two types of dynamic routing are analyzed: shortest path routing
(SPR), and cooperative multi-path routing (CMR) associated
with selection combining. An open-access experimental dataset
incorporating ‘everyday’ mixed-activities is used for analyzing
and comparing the cross-layer optimized routing protocols with
different wireless sensor network protocols, i.e., ORPL and
LOADng, and also with a standard star topology routing within a
BBN (multiple, connected, body area networks). Negligible packet
error rate is achieved by applying CMR and SPR techniques
with reasonably sensitive receivers. Moreover, at 10% outage
probability, CMR gains up to 12, 8, 7, and 6 dB improvements over star topology routing, ORPL, SPR, and LOADng,
respectively. We show that CMR achieves the highest throughput
(packets/s) while providing acceptable end-to-end delay with
95 ms maximum, at −100 dBm receive sensitivity. The use of
an alternate path in CMR reduces retransmissions and increases
the packet success rate, which significantly reduces the end-toend delay and energy consumption for CMR with respect to
the other protocols. It is also shown that the combined channel
gains across SPR and CMR are gamma and Rician distributed,
respectively
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IEEE Sensors Journal
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Restricted until
2099-12-31