Tree-Based Broadcasting in Multihop Radio Networks
IEEE Transactions on Computers
Medium access and radio resource management for ad hoc networks based on UTRA TDD
MobiHoc '01 Proceedings of the 2nd ACM international symposium on Mobile ad hoc networking & computing
The broadcast storm problem in a mobile ad hoc network
Wireless Networks - Selected Papers from Mobicom'99
Comparison of broadcasting techniques for mobile ad hoc networks
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM international symposium on Mobile ad hoc networking & computing
Analysis of topology-unaware TDMA MAC policies for ad-hoc networks under diverse traffic loads
ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and Communications Review - Special Issue on Medium Access and Call Admission Control Algorithms for Next Generation Wireless Networks.: The Digital Library version of this issue has a corrected special issue title compared to the one in the print version of the issue.
A distributed load-based transmission scheduling protocol for wireless ad hoc networks
Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Wireless communications and mobile computing
Energy considerations for topology-unaware TDMA MAC protocols
Ad Hoc Networks
Modeling the performance of flooding in wireless multi-hop Ad hoc networks
Computer Communications
M-PRMA protocol for vehicular multimedia communication
International Journal of Communication Networks and Distributed Systems
Research on vehicular ad hoc networks
CCDC'09 Proceedings of the 21st annual international conference on Chinese control and decision conference
Space-orthogonal frequency-time medium access control (SOFT MAC) for VANET
GIIS'09 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Global Information Infrastructure Symposium
Periodic broadcast type timing reservation MAC protocol for inter-vehicle communications
GLOBECOM'09 Proceedings of the 28th IEEE conference on Global telecommunications
SPARE MAC enhanced: a dynamic TDMA protocol for wireless sensor networks
GLOBECOM'09 Proceedings of the 28th IEEE conference on Global telecommunications
Transmission scheduling in multi-carrier multi-code spread aloha inter-vehicle communications system
WONS'10 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Wireless on-demand network systems and services
Characterization and abatement of the reassociation overhead in vehicle to roadside networks
IEEE Transactions on Communications
Towards collision-free medium access control in vehicular ad-hoc networks
VANET '11 Proceedings of the Eighth ACM international workshop on Vehicular inter-networking
A-ADHOC: An Adaptive Real-time Distributed MAC Protocol for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks
Mobile Networks and Applications
Performance evaluation of cross-layer routing for qos support in mobile ad hoc networks
PWC'06 Proceedings of the 11th IFIP TC6 international conference on Personal Wireless Communications
Evaluating the benefits and feasibility of coordinated medium access in MANETS
ACM SIGBED Review - Special Issue on the 10th International Workshop on Real-time Networks (RTN 2011)
Receiver oriented trajectory based forwarding
EURO-NGI'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Wireless Systems and Network Architectures in Next Generation Internet
A MAC protocol with dynamic frame size by vehicle estimation for vehicular ad hoc networks
Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Ubiquitous Information Management and Communication
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Ad-hoc networking, though an attractive solution for many applications, still has many unsolved issues, such as the hiddenterminal problem, flexible and prompt access, QoS provisioning, and efficient broadcast service. In this paper we present a MAC architecture able to solve the above issues in environments with no power consumption limitations, such as networks for inter-vehicle communications. This new architecture is based on a completely distributed access technique, RR-ALOHA, capable of dynamically establishing, for each active terminal in the network, a reliable single-hop broadcast channel on a slotted/framed structure. Though the proposed architecture uses a slotted channel it can be adapted to operate on the physical layer of different standards, including the UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access TDD, and IEEE 802.11. The paper presents the mechanisms that compose the new MAC: the basic RR-ALOHA protocol, an efficient broadcast service and the reservation of point-to-point channels that exploit parallel transmissions. Some basic performance figures are discussed to prove the effectiveness of the protocol.