Abstract

Routing in mobile social networks is a challenging task due to the characteristic of intermittent connectivity, especially when the nodes behave selfishly in real world. Selfish behaviors of node always influence its altruism to provide forwarding service for others and degrade network performance strongly. In this paper, to address the selfishness problem in MSNs, we propose a service-based selfish routing protocol, SSR. When making forwarding decision, SSR employ user altruism and the amount of service that the relay nodes provide. User altruism is determined by the social selfishness and the individual selfishness. The services include pairwise services and social services, which is also considered as the incentives to stimulate node to be more cooperative. The more services the node provides, the more chance the node has to be served. The node with higher altruism and fewer services is the preferred relay node. Simulation results show SSR achieves better performance when the user altruism is low and demonstrate the effectiveness of the service-based scheme.

Highlights

  • The portal devices such as smart phone, laptop, and tablet computer have been very popular in the world with the rapid development of the technologies of wireless communication and integrated circuit

  • We propose service-based selfish routing protocol for mobile social networks, which consider the user altruism to relay packets and the amount of service of node

  • We extend selfishness aware routing (SSAR) and SimBet with individual altruism IA

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Summary

Introduction

The portal devices such as smart phone, laptop, and tablet computer have been very popular in the world with the rapid development of the technologies of wireless communication and integrated circuit. To stimulate selfish nodes to forward packets, many incentive protocols such as reputation-based, credit-based, and TFT-based for ad hoc network have been proposed [9,10,11,12]. The goal of these incentives is to handle the individual selfishness, assuming that the status of nodes is equal. International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks quantifies the node’s willingness to evaluate its forwarding capability based on the social ties, which is not enough to reflect the real willingness of the node to relay the packets. We propose service-based selfish routing protocol for mobile social networks, which consider the user altruism to relay packets and the amount of service of node.

Related Works
System Models and Problem Statement
Detailed Design
Performance Evaluation
Conclusions
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