Design, implementation and case study of WISEMAN: WIreless sensors employing mobile AgeNts

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Abstract

We describe the practical implementation of Wiseman: our proposed scheme for running mobile agents in Wireless Sensor Networks. Wiseman's architecture derives from a much earlier agent system originally conceived for distributed process coordination in wired networks. Given the memory constraints associated with small sensor devices, we revised the architecture of the original agent system to make it applicable to this type of networks. Agents are programmed as compact text scripts that are interpreted at the sensor nodes. Wiseman is currently implemented in TinyOS ver. 1, its binary image occupies 19Kbytes of ROM memory, and it occupies 3Kbytes of RAM to operate. We describe the rationale behind Wiseman's interpreter architecture and unique programming features that can help reduce packet overhead in sensor networks. In addition, we gauge the proposed system's efficiency in terms of task duration with different network topologies through a case study that involves an early-fire-detection application in a fictitious forest setting. © Institute for Computer Science, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering 2009.

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González-Valenzuela, S., Chen, M., & Leung, V. C. M. (2009). Design, implementation and case study of WISEMAN: WIreless sensors employing mobile AgeNts. In Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering (Vol. 7 LNICST, pp. 366–380). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-01802-2_27

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