1st Edition

Mobile, Wireless and Sensor Networks A Clustering Algorithm for Energy Efficiency and Safety

By Amine Dahane, Nasr-Eddine Berrached Copyright 2020
236 Pages 5 Color & 123 B/W Illustrations
by Apple Academic Press

240 Pages 5 Color & 123 B/W Illustrations
by Apple Academic Press

236 Pages 5 Color & 123 B/W Illustrations
by Apple Academic Press

Wireless networking covers a variety of topics involving many challenges. The main concern of clustering approaches for mobile wireless sensor networks (WSNs) is to prolong the battery life of the individual sensors and the network lifetime. For a successful clustering approach, the need of a powerful mechanism to safely elect a cluster head remains a challenging task in many research works that... Read more

Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

Clustering Techniques

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

Security in Wsns

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

Wsns Routing Protocols

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

A Distributed and Safe Weighted Clustering Algorithm

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

Results and Discussion

A. Dahane and N. Berrached

Biography

Amine Dahane, PhD, is affiliated with the Intelligent Systems Research Laboratory, University of Sciences and Technology of Oran, Algeria. His



main research interests include wireless sensor networks, their security, routing and management, intrusion detection, and MAC protocols design issues. He is a reviewer of several journals and participates regularly at professional conferences. He received his Master's degree in Computer Systems and Networks from the University of Bechar and his PhD degree in Electronics from the University of Sciences and Technology of Oran (USTO, Algeria).







Nasr-Eddine Berrached, PhD, is a professor in the Electronics Department at University of Science and Technology of Oran, Algeria. Previously he headed the laboratory of robotics and the research laboratory in intelligent systems (LARESI). His interests include man-machine interface, telerobotics, machine vision, pattern recognition and inverse problem. He received his doctor of engineering in computer science degree from the Tokyo Institute of Technology (TIT, Japan).