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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
2013 pubmed 2 citations

Improving management performance of P2PSIP for mobile sensing in wireless overlays.

Sendín-Raña. Pablo P; González-Castaño. Francisco Javier FJ; Gómez-Cuba. Felipe F; Asorey-Cacheda. Rafael R; Pousada-Carballo. José María JM

Key Findings

  • An adaptive refresh‑time calculation reduces signaling overhead compared to previous methods.
  • The algorithm incorporates node‑to‑node delay as a parameter, improving reliability.
  • Performance gains were demonstrated on Kademlia‑based distributed hash tables and the dSIP protocol.

Practical Outcomes

  • For most biohackers and citizen scientists focused on health, the work offers little direct benefit. It may only be useful for those building or customizing their own wearable sensor networks, where lower power consumption and reliable data transmission are important.

Summary

The study proposes a new algorithm that lets peer‑to‑peer communication systems (used in things like mobile sensor networks) decide how often they need to refresh their connections. By using information about delays between devices, the algorithm cuts down on extra signaling traffic, which can save battery life and keep the network reliable.

Abstract

Future wireless communications are heading towards an all-Internet Protocol (all-IP) design, and will rely on the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) to manage services, such as voice over IP (VoIP). The centralized architecture of traditional SIP has numerous disadvantages for mobile ad hoc services that may be possibly overcome by advanced peer-to-peer (P2P) technologies initially developed for the Internet. In the context of mobile sensing, P2PSIP protocols facilitate decentralized and fast communications with sensor-enabled terminals. Nevertheless, in order to make P2PSIP protocols feasible in mobile sensing networks, it is necessary to minimize overhead transmissions for signaling purposes, which reduces the battery lifetime. In this paper, we present a solution to improve the management of wireless overlay networks by defining an adaptive algorithm for the calculation of refresh time. The main advantage of the proposed algorithm is that it takes into account new parameters, such as the delay between nodes, and provides satisfactory performance and reliability levels at a much lower management overhead than previous approaches. The proposed solution can be applied to many structured P2P overlays or P2PSIP protocols. We evaluate it with Kademlia-based distributed hash tables (DHT) and dSIP.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-11-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/s131115364

Citations

2

References

64