Achieving Dilution without Knowledge of Coordinates in the SINR Model
William K. Moses Jr., Shailesh Vaya

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel technique for achieving network dilution in the SINR model without requiring nodes to know their physical coordinates, enabling efficient communication in ad-hoc wireless networks.
Contribution
The paper presents a new method to perform dilution without coordinate knowledge, facilitating reliable communication in ad-hoc networks under the SINR model.
Findings
Achieves message transmission in Θ(log N) rounds.
Works without physical coordinate knowledge.
Applicable to ad-hoc wireless networks.
Abstract
Considerable literature has been developed for various fundamental distributed problems in the SINR (Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise-Ratio) model for radio transmission. A setting typically studied is when all nodes transmit a signal of the same strength, and each device only has access to knowledge about the total number of nodes in the network , the range from which each node's label is taken , and the label of the device itself. In addition, an assumption is made that each node also knows its coordinates in the Euclidean plane. In this paper, we create a technique which allows algorithm designers to remove that last assumption. The assumption about the unavailability of the knowledge of the physical coordinates of the nodes truly captures the `ad-hoc' nature of wireless networks. Previous work in this area uses a flavor of a technique called dilution, in which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Ad Hoc Networks · Cooperative Communication and Network Coding · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks
