cc 16(9): e4

Research Article

Bio-Inspired Routing Protocol Based on Pheromone Diffusion in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks

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  • @ARTICLE{10.4108/eai.3-12-2015.2262499,
        author={Hyun-Ho Choi and Jung-Ryun Lee and Bongsoo Roh and Mijeong Hoh and HyungSeok Choi},
        title={Bio-Inspired Routing Protocol Based on Pheromone Diffusion in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks},
        journal={EAI Endorsed Transactions on Collaborative Computing},
        volume={2},
        number={9},
        publisher={ACM},
        journal_a={CC},
        year={2016},
        month={5},
        keywords={routing protocol, bio-inspired routing, mobile ad hoc network, overhearing, pheromone diffusion},
        doi={10.4108/eai.3-12-2015.2262499}
    }
    
  • Hyun-Ho Choi
    Jung-Ryun Lee
    Bongsoo Roh
    Mijeong Hoh
    HyungSeok Choi
    Year: 2016
    Bio-Inspired Routing Protocol Based on Pheromone Diffusion in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
    CC
    EAI
    DOI: 10.4108/eai.3-12-2015.2262499
Hyun-Ho Choi1,*, Jung-Ryun Lee2, Bongsoo Roh3, Mijeong Hoh3, HyungSeok Choi3
  • 1: Hankyong National University
  • 2: Chung-Ang University
  • 3: Agency for Defense Development
*Contact email: hhchoi@hknu.ac.kr

Abstract

Bio-inspired routing protocols use the principle of swarm intelligence, which finds the optimal path to the destination in a distributed and autonomous way in dynamically changing environments; therefore, they can maximize the routing performance, reduce the control overhead, and recover a path failure quickly according to the change in the network topology. In this paper, we propose a bio-inspired routing protocol for mobile ad hoc networks. The proposed protocol uses a technique of overhearing for obtaining routing information without additional overhead. Through overhearing, a pheromone is diffused around the shortest path between the source and the destination. On the basis of this diffused pheromone, a probabilistic path exploration is executed and the useful alternative routes between the source and the destination are collected. Therefore, the proposed routing protocol can gather up-to-date effective routing information while reducing the control overhead. The simulation results show that the proposed routing protocol outperforms the typical ad hoc on-demand distance vector (AODV) and AntHocNet protocols in terms of the delivery ratio and the end-to-end delay and significantly decreases the routing overhead against AntHocNet.