Minimizing latency in wireless sensor networks: a survey
ACST'07 Proceedings of the third conference on IASTED International Conference: Advances in Computer Science and Technology
LL-MAC: A low latency MAC protocol for wireless self-organised networks
Microprocessors & Microsystems
An energy-efficient and low-latency sink positioning approach for wireless sensor networks
MSN'07 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Mobile ad-hoc and sensor networks
Towards the design of efficient nonbeacon-enabled ZigBee networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
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Recent advances in Wireless Sensors Network (WSN) technology have made possible the manufacturing of tiny low-cost, low-power sensors with wireless multi-hop communication and sensing capabilities. Energy conservation for WSNs is a primary objective that needs to be addressed at all layers of the networking protocol stack. In many applications latency is another crucial factor to be addressed. However this must be done in the context of the energy constraints imposed by the network. In this paper we present an experimental evaluation of two node scheduling regimes within MERLIN (Mac Energy efficient, Routing and Localization INtegrated), an energy-efficient low-latency integrated protocol for WSNs. In particular we contrast the X and V scheduling family schemes with respect to the following properties: network setup time, network lifetime and message latency. We conduct our experiments within the OmNet++ simulator.