Analyzing Cooperative Monitoring and Dissemination of Critical Mobile Events by VANETs
Everaldo Andrade, Aldri Santos, Paulo Maciel Jr, Fernando Matos

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how cooperative VANET systems monitor and disseminate information about mobile and fixed critical urban events, highlighting the importance of vehicle orientation and environment dynamics for effective communication.
Contribution
It provides a novel analysis of simultaneous fixed and mobile event dissemination in VANETs, considering environmental barriers and vehicle orientation effects.
Findings
High monitoring rates: 87% for mobile, 51.5% for fixed events.
Information delivery over 77% for mobile, 50% for fixed events.
Average delay around 0.3 seconds in most scenarios.
Abstract
The treatment of mobile and simultaneous critical urban events requires effective actions by the appropriate authorities. Additionally it implies communication challenges in the speed and accuracy of their occurrence by the entities, as well as dealing with the dynamics and speed in these environments. Cooperative solutions with shared resources that address these challenges become a real option in helping to handle these events. This paper presents an evaluation of dynamic monitoring and collaborative dissemination supported by vehicular groups. It aims to analyze the impact of multiple mobile and fixed events in an urban environment on information propagation, considering barriers imposed by the events and the environment. Differently from other studies in the literature, this work takes into account both fixed and mobile events, as well as simultaneous events. NS3 results show that…
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