4.7 Article

Trajectory Improves Data Delivery in Urban Vehicular Networks

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TPDS.2013.118

Keywords

Vehicular networks; probabilistic trajectory; routing; prediction; Markov chain

Funding

  1. Shanghai Pu Jiang Talents Program [10PJ1405800]
  2. Shanghai Chen Guang Program [10CG11]
  3. NSFC [61170238, 60903190, 61027009, 60933011, 61202375, 61170237]
  4. MIIT of China [2009ZX03006-001-01]
  5. Ministry of Education of China [20100073120021]
  6. National 863 Program [2009AA012201, 2011AA010500]
  7. HP IRP [CW267311]
  8. SJTU SMC Project [201120]
  9. STCSM [08dz1501600, 12ZR1414900]
  10. Singapore NRF [CREATE E2S2]
  11. NSFC/RGC [N-HKUST610/11]
  12. HKUST [RPC11EG29, SRFI11EG17-C, SBI09/10.EG01-C]
  13. Guangdong Bureau of Science and Technology [GDST11EG06]

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Efficient data delivery is of great importance, but highly challenging for vehicular networks because of frequent network disruption, fast topological change and mobility uncertainty. The vehicular trajectory knowledge plays a key role in data delivery. Existing algorithms have largely made predictions on the trajectory with coarse-grained patterns such as spatial distribution or/and the inter-meeting time distribution, which has led to poor data delivery performance. In this paper, we mine the extensive data sets of vehicular traces from two large cities in China, i.e., Shanghai and Shenzhen, through conditional entropy analysis, we find that there exists strong spatiotemporal regularity with vehicle mobility. By extracting mobility patterns from historical vehicular traces, we develop accurate trajectory predictions by using multiple order Markov chains. Based on an analytical model, we theoretically derive packet delivery probability with predicted trajectories. We then propose routing algorithms taking full advantage of predicted probabilistic vehicular trajectories. Finally, we carry out extensive simulations based on three large data sets of real GPS vehicular traces, i.e., Shanghai taxi data set, Shanghai bus data set and Shenzhen taxi data set. The conclusive results demonstrate that our proposed routing algorithms can achieve significantly higher delivery ratio at lower cost when compared with existing algorithms.

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