More about HKUST
Intelligent Sampling over Wireless Sensor Networks
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Department of Computer Science and Engineering PhD Thesis Defence Title: "Intelligent Sampling over Wireless Sensor Networks" By Miss Yongzhen Zhuang Abstract Nowadays, Wireless sensor networks (WSN) have been widely used in environmental monitoring applications because sensors are cheap and portable. These tiny distributed sensors provide discrete samples of environmental parameters, for example, temperature, humidity, gas pressure, decibel levels, and etc. Since sensors are always constrained by their limited battery power, how to energy efficiently use a large number of distributed sensors and their samples in an application is of great importance. In this thesis we have presented a series of intelligent sampling approaches. It is worthwhile to point out that sampling in sensor networks has many interesting properties. First, sensor sampling has two dimensions. The temporal dimension decides how many samples a sensor should obtain. In our sampling approaches, the temporal sampling is used to adjust the sensor sampling rates and provide required data quality under the noisy environment. The spatial dimension distributely selects a subset of sensors to save the sampling and transmission cost. We also find that sensor sampling is application dependent. Different applications (e.g. different queries, data cleaning, pattern search) usually require different approaches to optimally use the samples and sensors. Even different scenarios of an application (e.g. in a pattern search application, the sensory data may have or have no spatial similarity) affect the design of a sampling approach. This thesis includes three main parts: (1) intelligent sampling for sum and range queries, (2) intelligent sampling for a data cleaning application, and (3) intelligent sampling for some specific sensor applications, such as pattern query over distributed sensory streams and max regional aggregate query. Our extensive simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed sampling approaches in different applications. Date: Tuesday, 3 June 2008 Time: 9:30a.m.-11:30a.m. Venue: Room 3416 Lifts 17-18 Chairman: Prof. Howard Luong (ECE) Committee Members: Prof. Lei Chen (Supervisor) Prof. Vincent Shen Prof. Ke Yi Prof. Xiangru Zhang (CIVL) Prof. Jeffrey Yu (Sys. Engg. & Engg. Mgmt., CUHK) **** ALL are Welcome ****