SOS -- Self-Organization for Survival: Introducing fairness in emergency communication to save lives
Indushree Banerjee, Martijn Warnier, Frances M.T. Brazier, and Dirk, Helbing

TL;DR
This paper introduces SOS, a peer-to-peer communication protocol that ensures fair access and prolongs connectivity for citizens during disasters by self-organizing based on battery levels, enhancing resilience and communication longevity.
Contribution
It presents a novel fairness-driven, self-organizing network design based on the Barabasi-Albert model to improve emergency communication during disasters.
Findings
Extended network lifetime compared to generic mesh networks
Adaptive information flow based on battery distribution
Achieved fair battery charge distribution and higher participation
Abstract
Communication is crucial when disasters isolate communities of people and rescue is delayed. Such delays force citizens to be first responders and form small rescue teams. Rescue teams require reliable communication, particularly in the first 72 hours, which is challenging due to damaged infrastructure and electrical blackouts. We design a peer-to-peer communication network that meets these challenges. We introduce the concept of participatory fairness: equal communication opportunities for all citizens regardless of initial inequality in phone battery charge. Our value-sensitive design approach achieves an even battery charge distribution across phones over time and enables citizens to communicate over 72 hours. We apply the fairness principle to communication in an adapted standard Barabasi-Albert model of a scale-free network that automatically (i) assigns high-battery phones as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
