Title
Large-Scale Synthetic Social Mobile Networks with SWIM
Abstract
This paper presents small world in motion (SWIM), a new mobility model for ad hoc networking. SWIM is relatively simple, is easily tuned by setting just a few parameters, and generates traces that look real--synthetic traces have the same statistical properties of real traces in terms of intercontact times, contact duration, and frequency among node couples. Furthermore, it generates social behavior among nodes and models networks with complex social communities as the ones observed in the real traces. SWIM shows experimentally and theoretically the presence of the power-law and exponential decay dichotomy of intercontact times, and, most importantly, our experiments show that predicts very accurately the performance of forwarding protocols for PSNs like Epidemic, Delegation, Spray&Wait, and more complex, social-based ones like BUBBLE. Moreover, we propose a methodology to assess protocols on model with a large number of nodes. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such study. Scaling of mobility models is a fundamental issue, yet never considered in the literature. Thanks to SWIM, here we present the first analysis of the scaling capabilities of Epidemic Forwarding, Delegation Forwarding, Spray&Wait, and BUBBLE.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1109/TMC.2012.229
IEEE Trans. Mob. Comput.
Keywords
Field
DocType
Protocols,Humans,Computational modeling,Communities,Mathematical model,Mobile computing,Mobile communication
Mobile ad hoc network,Mobile computing,Computer science,Mobility model,Computer network,Wireless ad hoc network,Delegation,Scaling,Mobile telephony,Distributed computing
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
13
1
1536-1233
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
28
0.79
22
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Sokol Kosta127624.92
Alessandro Mei227013.37
Julinda Stefa347725.18