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A concept of communication distance and its application to six situations in mobile environments

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This paper appears in:
Mobile Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Date of Publication: Sept.-Oct. 2005
Author(s): Nickerson, J.V.
Stevens Inst. of Technol., Hoboken, NJ, USA
Volume: , Issue: 5
Page(s): 409 - 419
Product Type: Journals & Magazines

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Abstract

Wireless networks combined with location technology create new problems and call for new decision aids. As a precursor to the development of these decision aids, a concept of communication distance is developed and applied to six situations. This concept allows travel time and bandwidth to be combined in a single measure so that many problems can be mapped onto a weighted graph and solved through shortest path algorithms. The paper looks at the problem of intercepting an out-of-communication team member and describes ways of using planning to reduce communication distance in anticipation of a break in connection. The concept is also applied to ad hoc radio networks. A way of performing route planning using a bandwidth map is developed and analyzed. The general implications of the work to transportation planning are discussed.

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