Directed diffusion: a scalable and robust communication paradigm for sensor networks
MobiCom '00 Proceedings of the 6th annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking
GPSR: greedy perimeter stateless routing for wireless networks
MobiCom '00 Proceedings of the 6th annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking
Using publish/subscribe middleware for mobile systems
ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and Communications Review
The many faces of publish/subscribe
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Data-centric storage in sensornets with GHT, a geographic hash table
Mobile Networks and Applications
Wireless sensor networks: A survey on the state of the art and the 802.15.4 and ZigBee standards
Computer Communications
A survey on context-aware systems
International Journal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing
Publish/subscribe architecture for mobile ad hoc networks
Proceedings of the 2008 ACM symposium on Applied computing
Q-NiGHT: Adding QoS to Data Centric Storage in Non-Uniform Sensor Networks
MDM '07 Proceedings of the 2007 International Conference on Mobile Data Management
Connectivity-based localization of large-scale sensor networks with complex shape
ACM Transactions on Sensor Networks (TOSN)
Wireless sensor networks based on publish/subscribe messaging paradigms
GPC'11 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Advances in grid and pervasive computing
PS-QUASAR: A publish/subscribe QoS aware middleware for Wireless Sensor and Actor Networks
Journal of Systems and Software
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The rapid development of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) technologies gave rise to the need for abstraction mechanisms that can simplify the data management tasks. Under this respect, the publish/subscribe paradigms play an important role since they can be used to abstract the WSN in terms that are closer to applicative needs. On the other hand, Data Centric Storage systems (DCS) can provide a low-level support to the implementation of publish/subscribe systems in WSN. In this paper we consider different implementations of publish/subscribe systems, based either on DCS or basic network primitives and we compare the resulting approaches in terms of functionalities and performance.