* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download 1 - Cyber-Physical Systems Integration Group @ DGIST
Wireless security wikipedia , lookup
Zero-configuration networking wikipedia , lookup
Computer network wikipedia , lookup
Piggybacking (Internet access) wikipedia , lookup
Cracking of wireless networks wikipedia , lookup
Recursive InterNetwork Architecture (RINA) wikipedia , lookup
Network tap wikipedia , lookup
Wireless USB wikipedia , lookup
Peer-to-peer wikipedia , lookup
Routing in delay-tolerant networking wikipedia , lookup
A Survey and Outlook Sunghwa Son Wireless Body Area Network • • • WBAN Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN) -> Body Area Network (BAN) -> WBAN WBAN is a RF-based wireless networking technology that interconnects tiny nodes with sensor or actuator capabilities in, on, or around a human body WBANs provide ubiquitous networking functionalities for applications varying from healthcare to safeguarding of uniformed personnel Wireless Body Area Network • Typically, it covers a short range of about 2m • It can be connected to local and wide area networks • Human-computer interaction (HCI) is booming WBAN characteristics • Architecture: consists of two categories of nodes: sensors/actuators and router nodes • Density: nodes are not deployed with high redundancy, and thus do not require high node density • Data rate: WBANs are employed for monitoring human physiological activities. Thus, the application data streams exhibit relatively stable rates WBAN characteristics • Latency: for both healthcare and consumer applications, latency resulting from the underlying network such as a WBAN should be minimized • Mobility: WBAN nodes affiliated with the same wearer move together and in the same direction Application of WBANs WBANs for healthcare WBANs for HCI CodeBlue project • Harvard University • It considers a hospital environment where multiple router nodes can be deployed on the wall -> all nodes use ZigBee radio • System is limited to 40 kb/s aggregate bandwidth per receiver because of mobility and multihop Advanced Health and Disaster Aid Network (AID-N) • It is developed at Johns Hopkins University based on the CodeBlue architecture • GPS is employed for outdoor localization and MoteTrack for indoors • Patients have mobility constraints - lack of routers in the network • Limited number of sensor nodes - limited bandwidth Wearable Health Monitoring Systems (WHMS) • It is developed at the University of Alabama and targets a larger-scale telemedicine system • WHMS has a star-topology network • Power consumption and cost associated with long-term data uploading can hamper system realization Application of WBANs WBANs for healthcare WBANs for HCI Intra-Body Communications (IBC) • Traditional computer interfaces are all replaceable by potential WBAN devices • It can be used to assist handicapped people -> blind person and deaf person MITHrill • It is a wearable computing platform that includes electrocardiography (ECG), skin temperature, and galvanic skin response sensors for wearable sensing and context-aware interaction -> not a real WBAN • MITHrill 2003 -> using Wi-Fi Microsystems Platform for Mobile Services and Applications (MIMOSA) • Its approach is similar to WHMS while it exclusively employs a mobile phone as the user-carried interface device • Bluetooth Low Energy and RFID are used for connecting local sensor nodes • NanoIP, and Simple Sensor Interface (SSI) protocols are integrated into MIMOSA Wireless Sensor Node for a Motion Capture System with Accelerometers (WiMoCA) • It is concerned with the design and implementation of a distributed gesture recognition system • It uses star topology and coordinator in turn relays the data to an external processing unit using Bluetooth Sensor devices • Sensors are key components of a WBAN role: bridge the physical world and electronic systems • Previous -> low sampling frequency and low data transmission rate would be sufficient • Today -> for better monitor human, a wide range of commercially available sensors can be deployed • With advances in micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS), sensor devices are getting even tinier in size and changing the traditional way of measuring human physiological parameters Radio Technologies Radio Propagation Blutooth Low Energy Technology UWB BluTooth 3.0 + High speed ZigBee • Researchers have made considerable progress in characterizing the body area propagation environment through both measurement-based and simulation-based • Theses works have been conducted in both the industrial, scientific, and medical (ISM) bands and the ultra-sideband (UWB) • In each of the frequency bands, intra-body, on-body, and off-body channels have been studied Significant progress been made toward • Identification of the propagation mechanisms that affect signal transmissions between nodes • Assessment of the effects of multipath reflections from the external environment to signal transmissions between nodes • Characterization of the fading statistics on body links that occur with body motion and change of body position in both sparse and rich scattering environment • Development of standard UWB channel impulse response models and evaluation of typical modulation schemes utilizing them • With advances in very large-scale integration (VLSI), dual and multiple-standard radios can be integrated into a single chip, greatly reducing the cost and power consumption Radio Technologies Radio Propagation Blutooth Low Energy Technology UWB BluTooth 3.0 + High speed ZigBee Bluetooth Low End Extension (LEE) • It was introduced in 2004 by Nokia • It was designed to wirelessly connect small devices to mobile terminals • LEE was released to the public with the name Wibree in 2006 • Its products can be categorized into two groups - dual-mode chips: equipped with sensors/actuators - standalone chips: equipped with a personal server • It will likely operate using a simpler protocol stack and focus on short-range star-configured networks Radio Technologies Radio Propagation Blutooth Low Energy Technology UWB BluTooth 3.0 + High speed ZigBee UWB • According to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), UWB refers to any radio technology • FCC also regulates license-free use of UWB in the 3.1-10.6 GHz band • The suitability of UWB applications in short-range and indoor environments UWB • UWB is also an ideal technology for precise localization • IEEE 802.15.6-Body Area Networks (BANs) will likely employ UWB • However, when this standard and any electronics that utilize it will become available remains unknown Radio Technologies Radio Propagation Blutooth Low Energy Technology UWB BluTooth 3.0 + High speed ZigBee BluTooth 3.0 + High speed • BluTooth 3.0 + High speed introduces the 802.11 protocol adaptation layer (PAL) into the protocol stack, and increases data rate support from 3 Mb/s to 24 Mb/s • Limitations of Bluetooth include the small number of active slaves (seven) that each piconet supports and indirect communications between slaves Radio Technologies Radio Propagation Blutooth Low Energy Technology UWB BluTooth 3.0 + High speed ZigBee ZigBee/IEEE 802.15.4 • It targets low-data-rate and low-powerconsumption applications • It can provide a flexible framework and it better suits WBAN deployment scenarios in a limited area • Compared to Bluetooth and UWB, it can operate in three ISM bands, with data rates from 20 kb/s to 250 kb/s ZigBee/IEEE 802.15.4 • ZigBee supports three types of topologies -> star, cluster tree, and mesh • The major advantage of ZigBee is its capability of providing multihop routing in a cluster three or mesh topology -> WBAN network coverage can be expanded to a WPAN using the same radio ZigBee/IEEE 802.15.4 • ZigBee mesh network - full-function devices (FFDs) - reduced-function devices (RFDs) • They think ZigBee may have a better chance to be adopted in the area of home automation and industrial automation and control Connecting WBANs and the world • A global trend for interconnection of data networks is to use IP • WBAN packets can be translated into IP datagrams by a gateway at the edge of a WBAN • The ubiquitous access and connectivity of WBANs into the global network requires • - network infrastructure support, lowpower and low-footprint software implementations for routing, flow/error control, remote procedure calls, database management, and user interface Open research issues & Conclusion Open research issues • Physical characteristics of sensor/actuator materials and electronic circuits • Development and evaluation of improved propagation and channel models • Networking and resource management schemes • Security, authentication, and privacy issues • Power supply issues • Rules of engagement Conclusion • WBAN plays a very important role in ubiquitous healthcare applications and enjoys a huge potential market in the area of consumer electronics • While WBAN technologies provide a promising platform to enable ubiquitous communications, several open issues still need to be addressed