A survey on wireless sensor networks deployment
WSEAS TRANSACTIONS on COMMUNICATIONS
Challenges for wireless sensor networks deployment
DIWEB'08 Proceedings of the 8th WSEAS international conference on Distance learning and web engineering
A security analysis for wireless sensor mesh networks in highly critical systems
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part C: Applications and Reviews
A multi-resolution agent for service-oriented situations in ubiquitous domains
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Denial of service mitigation approach for IPv6-enabled smart object networks
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience
Information security strategies: towards an organizational multi-strategy perspective
Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing
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A wireless sensor network should be able to operate for long periods of time with little or no external management. There is a requirement for this autonomy: the sensor nodes must be able to configure themselves in the presence of adverse situations. Therefore, the nodes should make use of situation awareness mechanisms to determine the existence of abnormal events in their surroundings. This work approaches the problem by considering the possible abnormal events as diseases, thus making it possible to diagnose them through their symptoms, namely, their side effects. Considering these awareness mechanisms as a foundation for high-level monitoring services, this article also shows how these mechanisms are included in the blueprint of an intrusion detection system.