Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup

The city infrastructure is an integral part of vehicular ad-hoc networks and intelligent transportation systems. One of the key infrastructures is the roadside unit (RSU) which can vastly improve the efficiency and coverage of data dissemination and information exchange in the vehicular network when...

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Main Author: Magsino, Elmer R.
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Published: Animo Repository 2019
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2969
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-39682021-11-18T02:53:41Z Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup Magsino, Elmer R. The city infrastructure is an integral part of vehicular ad-hoc networks and intelligent transportation systems. One of the key infrastructures is the roadside unit (RSU) which can vastly improve the efficiency and coverage of data dissemination and information exchange in the vehicular network when deployed judiciously. RSU can also provide real-time traffic control, safety and road services to drivers. In this paper, we study how to strategically deploy RSUs in candidate junctions in a city layout by employing findings from taxi GPS traces such as the total daily number of vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) contacts, transmissions, transmitted file size, and the average space speed. A Consolidated Weighted Mean Approach, ConsWMA, based from four practical methods for deploying RSUs, is proposed to maximize the amount of V2I contacts. We observe that these mobility traces' findings, when set as deployment criteria, can reduce the needed number of RSUs to be deployed and the missing V2I contacts. Simulation results show that when nine out of the 40 possible RSU locations are allocated in the first two rings of Beijing City, a 95% daily average V2I contacts is attained, thereby making information dissemination feasible. ConsWMA also provides at least 11% more V2I contacts when compared to two other deployment methods. © 2019 IEEE. 2019-04-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2969 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Intelligent transportation systems Mobile communication systems Railroads—Communication systems Roadside improvement Electrical and Electronics
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Intelligent transportation systems
Mobile communication systems
Railroads—Communication systems
Roadside improvement
Electrical and Electronics
spellingShingle Intelligent transportation systems
Mobile communication systems
Railroads—Communication systems
Roadside improvement
Electrical and Electronics
Magsino, Elmer R.
Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
description The city infrastructure is an integral part of vehicular ad-hoc networks and intelligent transportation systems. One of the key infrastructures is the roadside unit (RSU) which can vastly improve the efficiency and coverage of data dissemination and information exchange in the vehicular network when deployed judiciously. RSU can also provide real-time traffic control, safety and road services to drivers. In this paper, we study how to strategically deploy RSUs in candidate junctions in a city layout by employing findings from taxi GPS traces such as the total daily number of vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) contacts, transmissions, transmitted file size, and the average space speed. A Consolidated Weighted Mean Approach, ConsWMA, based from four practical methods for deploying RSUs, is proposed to maximize the amount of V2I contacts. We observe that these mobility traces' findings, when set as deployment criteria, can reduce the needed number of RSUs to be deployed and the missing V2I contacts. Simulation results show that when nine out of the 40 possible RSU locations are allocated in the first two rings of Beijing City, a 95% daily average V2I contacts is attained, thereby making information dissemination feasible. ConsWMA also provides at least 11% more V2I contacts when compared to two other deployment methods. © 2019 IEEE.
format text
author Magsino, Elmer R.
author_facet Magsino, Elmer R.
author_sort Magsino, Elmer R.
title Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
title_short Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
title_full Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
title_fullStr Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
title_full_unstemmed Employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
title_sort employing mobility traces' findings in deploying roadside units in an urban setup
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2019
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2969
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