Abstract

Over the past few decades, the growth of the urban population has been remarkable. Nowadays, 50% of the population lives in urban areas, and forecasts point that by 2050 this number will reach 70%. Today, 64% of all travel made is within urban environments and the total amount of urban kilometers traveled is expected to triple by 2050. Thus, seeking novel solutions for urban mobility becomes paramount for 21st century society. In this work, we discuss the performance of vehicular networks. We consider the metric Delta Network. The Delta Network characterizes the connectivity of the vehicular network through the percentage of travel time in which vehicles are connected to roadside units. This article reviews the concept of the Delta Network and extends its study through the presentation of a general heuristic based on the definition of scores to identify the areas of the road network that should receive coverage. After defining the general heuristic, we show how small changes in the score computation can generate very distinct (and interesting) patterns of coverage, each one suited to a given scenario. In order to exemplify such behavior, we propose three deployment strategies based on simply changing the computation of scores. We compare the proposed strategies to the intuitive strategy of allocating communication units at the most popular zones of the road network. Experiments show that the strategies derived from the general heuristic provide higher coverage than the intuitive strategy when using the same number of communication devices. Moreover, the resulting pattern of coverage is very interesting, with roadside units deployed a circle pattern around the traffic epicenter.

Highlights

  • Smart cities are receiving increasing attention from governments and society

  • The Delta Network characterizes the connectivity of the vehicular network through the percentage of travel time in which vehicles are connected to roadside units

  • This article reviews the concept of the Delta Network and extends its study through the presentation of a general heuristic based on the definition of scores to identify areas of the road network that should receive coverage

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Summary

Introduction

Smart cities are receiving increasing attention from governments and society. Nam and Pardo [2] group key conceptual components of smart cities into three categories of core factors: Technology (infrastructures of hardware and software), people (creativity, diversity, and education), and institution (governance and policy). Given the connection between the factors, a city is smart when investments in human/social capital and IT infrastructure fuel sustainable growth and enhance a quality of life, through participatory governance [3]. Over the past few decades, the growth of the urban population has been remarkable. Users would pay-per-use, instead of buying vehicles. Such change would drastically reduce the demand for parking spaces, since less vehicles would be required. The society would benefit from a better use of natural resources employed in manufacturing vehicles (which spend a considerable part of their lifetimes parked)

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