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Sensors on the Grid

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Sensors on the Grid. M Palaniswami. Convener, ARC Research ... Tracking in multi-sensor, multi-target scenarios ... Biomedical Informatics and Pharmaceutical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sensors on the Grid


1
Sensors on the Grid
  • M Palaniswami
  • Convener, ARC Research Network on Intelligent
    Sensors, Sensor Networks and Information
    Processing
  • Dept of Electrical and Electronics Engineering
  • The University of Melbourne

2
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

3
Focus of ARC RN on ISSNIP Application Driven
Networked Sensors
BISP Bio Inspired Signal Processing NMSO
Non-linear Methods and Stochastic
Optimization CSIP Collaborative Signal and
Information Processing ILSP Inference and
Learning by Signal Processing SBMIP Scale
Based and Multi- dimensional Information
Processing
4
Key Disciplines targeted
  • Environment
  • Environmentally Sustainable Australia
  • Defence
  • Safeguarding Australia
  • Health
  • Maintaining Good Health

5
Typical Projects
  • Wide area surveillance systems
  • Vision system for autonomous UAVs Detecting,
    locating and tracking
  • Bio-inspired sensor fusion
  • Biomimetics for tracking
  • Tracking in multi-sensor, multi-target scenarios
  • Target location identification by
    self-organising UAVs
  • Distributed control through sensor networks
  • Distributed communication and computation in
    sensor networks
  • Smart Homes for the aged
  • E-science
  • Ad-hoc wireless networks
  • Nano Sensor Vision System
  • Quality of service in flow control for sensor
    networks
  • Water Catchment's Flow Monitoring

50 Academic Staff 50 Post Docs 50
Students www.sensornetworks.net.au
6
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

7
Why Smart Sensors??
  • Rated as one of the top 5 technologies which will
    shape the future.
  • Interdisciplinary Areas of physics, chemistry,
    advanced materials, molecular biology with
    Electronics and signal processing
  • Result of Advances in Nano Technology and
    Wireless Communication
  • Advances in Sensor Technologies
  • Miniaturization
  • New Sensing capabilities
  • Wireless, low power and smart
  • Enhanced sensitivity, selectivity, speed,
    robustness and fewer false alarms
  • Reconfigurable
  • Ability to respond to new toxic chemicals,
    explosives and biological agents

8
Where is the Market?
  • Environmental
  • Defence
  • Intelligent applications
  • Biomedical Informatics and Pharmaceutical
  • Transportation (auto, heavy vehicles, off-road
    vehicles, etc.)
  • Chemical
  • Refinery
  • Pump and paper
  • Textile, glass, steel and other forging

9
Smart Sensors
  • Sensing Devices with Microprocessor and
    Transceiver is termed as Smart Sensor
  • The ability to function in complex and unusual
    environment
  • Research Opportunities Miniaturization, Smart
    materials for actuators and sensors, Efficient
    Data Fusion and archiving, Feature Extraction,
    Wireless Communication, Efficient Power Supply,
    Data handling

10
Smart Sensor Architecture
Limited Memory
Limited Lifetime
Communication
Sensing Element
Processing Element
1 kbps 1 Mbps, 3 100 m, Lossy Transmission
S E N S O R S
MEMORY
R A D I O
P S O U W P E P R L Y
A D C
MICRO PROCESSOR
Require Supervision
Courtesy Prof. Vittal Rao
ALGORITHMS
Slow Processing
REAL TIME OS
11
A Few Smart Sensor Implementations
Smart ITS Project http//smart-its.teco.edu/
Finger Tip Sensors http//www.emt.uni-linz.ac.at/e
ducation/diplomarbeiten/da_kornsteiner/kornsteiner
.html
TINY HEART Heart of the smart
Sensor http//www.anl.gov/OPA/logos20-3/smartsenso
r01.htm
Worlds smallest Capsule endoscope http//www.rfno
rika.com
JPL Sensor Web
A Bee Tracker
12
Distributed Sensor Networks
13
Distributed Sensor Networks - Components
  • Sources of data Measure data, report them
    somewhere
  • Typically equip with different kinds of actual
    sensors
  • Sinks of data Interested in receiving data from
    WSN
  • May be part of the WSN or external entity, PDA,
    gateway,
  • Actuators Control some device based on data,
    usually also a sink

14
A few challenges
  • Information flow control from multiple sensor to
    single destination
  • QOS Requirements Optimization, Flow Control
    Algorithms, Multi-path Networks
  • Content based sensor information extraction
  • Graph theory, Information Retrieval
  • Decentralised Estimation and Distributed
    Processing
  • Cryptography and Communication Protocols
  • Energy Aware Sensor Networks
  • Location Aware Sensor Networks
  • Data Aggregation and Reusability

15
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

16
Traditional Devices vs. Smart Sensors
  • Traditional Devices (Computers and High End
    Resources) are
  • Powerful
  • Connected to Power Grid so we dont worry too
    much about it power consumption
  • Large Storage Space
  • Good for archival and large-scale analysis
  • Connected by High Bandwidth/Speed Network
  • Smart Sensors
  • Less powerful
  • Scarcity of power (battery operated, or even
    self-power generated)
  • Less Storage
  • No good for archival
  • Connected by Low Bandwidth/Speed Network
  • But they can sense/smell a phenomena in the
    physical world.

17
Bringing Sensor and Grid together
  • Both of them will benefit
  • Grids
  • Resource sharing coordinated problem solving
    in dynamic, multi-institutional virtual
    organizations
  • Get Eye to see the world (so that it can sense
    and assist)
  • Sensors
  • Off load their processing, storage, archival,
    analysis, etc. requirements to the Grid.
  • Sensors Grids SensorGrid

Thanks to Dr.Buyya
18
Sensor Grid in Health Care
  • Data Management
  • Computation Management
  • Information Management
  • Knowledge Discovery

Source Gayner et. al., IEEE Internet Computing
19
Challenges in SensorGrid
  • Scalability
  • Robustness
  • Security
  • Quality of Service
  • Resource Discovery
  • Uniform Access
  • Application Construction

20
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

21
Radio Frequency Identification Devices (RFID)
  • Uses radio-frequency waves to transfer data
    between a reader and a movable item to identify,
    categorize, track...
  • Holds a small amount of unique data a serial
    number or other unique attribute of the item
  • RFIDs are fast and reliable
  • They do not require physical sight or contact
    between reader/scanner and the tagged item
  • Require tags, antennas, interrogators and host
    computers
  • Of course appropriate software is required

22
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

23
RFID System Components
Reader
Antenna
Asset/Tag
Asset
Firmware
TCP/IP

Host
Power
Application Software
Customers MIS
Thanks to Craig K. Harmon
API
24
RFID Operations
  • Examples
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Tracking
  • Identification and Security

Thanks to Craig K. Harmon
25
Basic needs for a company to work
  • Manufacturing
  • Distribution
  • Sales
  • Inventory
  • Transportation

26
To make the company Global
  • Sensor Technology (RFID)
  • Manufacturing
  • Distribution
  • Sales
  • Inventory
  • Transportation
  • Appropriate Middleware

27
Are there companies with such enabled
technologies?
  • Sensor Technology (RFID)
  • Manufacturing
  • Distribution
  • Sales
  • Inventory
  • Transportation
  • Middleware

Answer is Yes
28
Supply Chain
29
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

30
Network Centric Warfare
  • OmniGrid
  • This is mother of all grids which has the
    responsibility of collecting, storing, securing
    and processing sensor data from all armed
    divisions
  • SensorGrid
  • Collection of network sensors which will send the
    aggregated information via distribute processing
    to OmniGrid
  • ActuatorGrid
  • Acts in response to the command issued by
    OmniGrid in defending from the enemy or
    destroying the enemy.

31
Underwater Warfare Data Fusion Pictorial view
http//www.atlantic.drdc-rddc.gc.ca/factsheets/22_
UDF_e.shtml
32
Network Centric Warfare
FORMATIONS
HORIZON EXTENSION
LOCATE
MAW
SEAD
Kim Brown 2002
33
Talk Outline
  • Background
  • Introduction to Smart Sensors
  • SensorGrid
  • SensorGrid Application Scenarios
  • Global Integration with Smart Sensors
  • Defense Sensor Network
  • Environmental Sensor Network
  • Conclusion

34
Great Barrier Reef
  • 3,200 reefs
  • 280,000 km2
  • Fluctuations range from kilometre oceanic mixing
    to millimetre inter-skeletal currents
  • Temperature, Salinity, Light and Oxygen to be
    measured every 30 mins

Courtesy Stuart Kininmonth, AIMS
35
Environmental SN Great Barrier Reef
  • Effective management of Great Barrier Reef (GBR)
  • Study of Environmental Dynamics
  • To effectively manage and protect it
  • Spread across several hundreds of kilometers
  • Large number of networked sensors are required
    for efficient data sampling
  • The long term costs to monitor environment due to
    the human involvement is on the rise
  • The economic activity associated with the Great
    Barrier Reef is estimated to be over Au 4
    Billion annually.

36
Current Status
  • Floating buoys are deployed
  • Difficult to collect data across the required
    spatial and temporal scales, hence data is often
    poorly sampled
  • Long term costs are high

Courtesy Stuart Kininmonth, AIMS
37
A SensorGrid Architecture for GBR
Data transfer
Web Server
Regular intervals
Output Salinity Temperature etc. .
Lab Server
Sensors Temperature Salinity Other smart sensors
Digital Library
38
Future of Networked Sensors - SLIM
S L I M
Sense To build Intelligent Bio-Sensors
Learn Learning algorithms to model, predict and
classify
Interact Powerful network flow Protocols
Motivate Actuate a process on the basis of
learning Stable network dynamic control
This is the path to powerful thinking machines
that can sense, learn, interact, store and act in
a complex environment
39
Collaborators
  • Anthony Finn, DSTO
  • Ian Atkinson, JCU
  • Stuart Kininmonth, AIMS
  • Subhash Challa, UTS
  • Raj Buyya, UniMelb
  • DEST Distributed Sensor Networks Team
  • ISSNIP Team

40
Thank You
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