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Lost in the woods: Forest vegetation, and not topography, most affects the connectivity of mesh radio networks for public safety
by
Zimbelman, Eloise G.
, Keefe, Robert F.
in
Antennas
/ Artificial satellites in remote sensing
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Connectivity
/ Dirichlet problem
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Environmental monitoring
/ Evaluation
/ Fatalities
/ Finite element method
/ Fire fighting
/ Forest & brush fires
/ Forest vegetation
/ Forestry
/ Forests and forestry
/ Idaho
/ Information management
/ Internet of Things
/ Lidar
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Modelling
/ Networks
/ Optical radar
/ Public lands
/ Public safety
/ Radio frequency
/ Radio networks
/ Real time
/ Remote sensing
/ Safety
/ Satellites
/ Sensors
/ Situational awareness
/ Smartphones
/ Teams
/ Topography
/ Vegetation
/ Wildfires
/ Wireless communications
2022
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Lost in the woods: Forest vegetation, and not topography, most affects the connectivity of mesh radio networks for public safety
by
Zimbelman, Eloise G.
, Keefe, Robert F.
in
Antennas
/ Artificial satellites in remote sensing
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Connectivity
/ Dirichlet problem
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Environmental monitoring
/ Evaluation
/ Fatalities
/ Finite element method
/ Fire fighting
/ Forest & brush fires
/ Forest vegetation
/ Forestry
/ Forests and forestry
/ Idaho
/ Information management
/ Internet of Things
/ Lidar
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Modelling
/ Networks
/ Optical radar
/ Public lands
/ Public safety
/ Radio frequency
/ Radio networks
/ Real time
/ Remote sensing
/ Safety
/ Satellites
/ Sensors
/ Situational awareness
/ Smartphones
/ Teams
/ Topography
/ Vegetation
/ Wildfires
/ Wireless communications
2022
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Lost in the woods: Forest vegetation, and not topography, most affects the connectivity of mesh radio networks for public safety
by
Zimbelman, Eloise G.
, Keefe, Robert F.
in
Antennas
/ Artificial satellites in remote sensing
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Computer and Information Sciences
/ Connectivity
/ Dirichlet problem
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Engineering and Technology
/ Environmental monitoring
/ Evaluation
/ Fatalities
/ Finite element method
/ Fire fighting
/ Forest & brush fires
/ Forest vegetation
/ Forestry
/ Forests and forestry
/ Idaho
/ Information management
/ Internet of Things
/ Lidar
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Modelling
/ Networks
/ Optical radar
/ Public lands
/ Public safety
/ Radio frequency
/ Radio networks
/ Real time
/ Remote sensing
/ Safety
/ Satellites
/ Sensors
/ Situational awareness
/ Smartphones
/ Teams
/ Topography
/ Vegetation
/ Wildfires
/ Wireless communications
2022
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Lost in the woods: Forest vegetation, and not topography, most affects the connectivity of mesh radio networks for public safety
Journal Article
Lost in the woods: Forest vegetation, and not topography, most affects the connectivity of mesh radio networks for public safety
2022
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Overview
Real-time data- and location-sharing using mesh networking radios paired with smartphones may improve situational awareness and safety in remote environments lacking communications infrastructure. Despite being increasingly used for wildland fire and public safety applications, there has been little formal evaluation of the network connectivity of these devices. The objectives of this study were to 1) characterize the connectivity of mesh networks in variable forest and topographic conditions; 2) evaluate the abilities of lidar and satellite remote sensing data to predict connectivity; and 3) assess the relative importance of the predictive metrics. A large field experiment was conducted to test the connectivity of a network of one mobile and five stationary goTenna Pro mesh radios on 24 Public Land Survey System sections approximately 260 ha in area in northern Idaho. Dirichlet regression was used to predict connectivity using 1) both lidar- and satellite-derived metrics (LIDSAT); 2) lidar-derived metrics only (LID); and 3) satellite-derived metrics only (SAT). On average the full network was connected only 32.6% of the time (range: 0% to 90.5%) and the mobile goTenna was disconnected from all other devices 18.2% of the time (range: 0% to 44.5%). RMSE for the six connectivity levels ranged from 0.101 to 0.314 for the LIDSAT model, from 0.103 to 0.310 for the LID model, and from 0.121 to 0.313 for the SAT model. Vegetation-related metrics affected connectivity more than topography. Developed models may be used to predict the connectivity of real-time mesh networks over large spatial extents using remote sensing data in order to forecast how well similar networks are expected to perform for wildland firefighting, forestry, and public safety applications. However, safety professionals should be aware of the impacts of vegetation on connectivity.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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