Proceedings of the 2nd Workshop on Middleware for Pervasive and Ad-Hoc Computing - 2004
DOI: 10.1145/1028509.1028521
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Scoping in wireless sensor networks

Abstract: One of the trends of wireless sensor networks (WSN) is to allow multiple applications to run on top of the same sensor network. This will have an enormous impact on the way WSN applications are developed, deployed and maintained. Many applications for WSN are still developed on very low level functions provided by simple operating systems or bare hardware. Alternatively, generic WSN middleware focuses on very high-level system abstractions, such as declarative query languages, and acts as black box that tries … Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The basic concepts of scopes was originally conceived to provide structure in loosely coupled publish/subscribe broker networks [32,33] in the Rebeca Publish/Subscribe system, see also section 5.1.2. These were later proposed for sensor networks by J. Steffan in [123,124] and the first implementation was done in [53] for a simulator to prove feasibility.…”
Section: Organization Of This Thesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The basic concepts of scopes was originally conceived to provide structure in loosely coupled publish/subscribe broker networks [32,33] in the Rebeca Publish/Subscribe system, see also section 5.1.2. These were later proposed for sensor networks by J. Steffan in [123,124] and the first implementation was done in [53] for a simulator to prove feasibility.…”
Section: Organization Of This Thesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using such scopes, applications can group the entities in a system so that producers restrict the dissemination of their events to consumers within the same scope. The purpose of this abstraction is to handle heterogeneity and provide a means for integrating membership policies possibly in applications that are based on wireless sensor networks [25].…”
Section: Exploiting Location In Event Disseminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A scope can also be dynamic by marking all events in a certain session with a tag -this can be viewed as tagging all the events in an interaction. Scopes have also been applied to sensor networks, [21], as a generic abstraction for a group of nodes.…”
Section: State Of the Artmentioning
confidence: 99%