Work place: Department of Electronic Engineering Northwestern Polytechnical University Xi'an, P. R. China
E-mail: shilaoshi@nwpu.edu.cn
Website:
Research Interests: Computational Science and Engineering, Software Engineering
Biography
Hao-shan Shi was born in Shan xi Province, China, in 1946. He received the M.S. degree in electronic engineering from Northwestern Polytechnical University, China, in 1982. Currently, he is a professor in Department of Electronics and Information, Northwestern Polytechnical University, and the Vice Director of the Institute of Multimedia Communication and Software Engineering, Northwestern Polytechnical University. His research interests include wireless communication, software defined radio, and wireless multimedia signal processing, etc.
By Qing-wen WANG Hao-shan Shi Qian Qi
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijmecs.2010.01.06, Pub. Date: 8 Nov. 2010
Broadcasting plays a fundamental role in transmitting a message from the sender to the rest of the network nodes in Mobile Ad hoc Networks (MANETs). The blind flooding scheme causes a broadcast storm problem, which leads to significant network performance degradation. In order to solve the problem, a dynamic probabilistic broadcasting scheme cross-layer design for MANETs (DPBSC) is proposed. DPBSC adopts the cross-layer design, which lets routing layer share the received signal power information at MAC layer while still maintaining separation between the two layers. The additional transmission range that can benefit from rebroadcast is calculated according to the received signal power, which is applied to dynamically adjust the rebroadcast probability. DPBSC reduces the redundant retransmission and the chance of the contention and collision in the networks. Simulation results reveal that the DPBSC achieves better performance in terms of the saved-rebroadcast, the average packet drop fraction, the average number of collisions and average end-to-end delay at expense of the throughput, which is respectively compared with the blind flooding and fixed probabilistic flooding applied at the routing layer while IEEE 802.11 at the MAC layer.
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