This book introduces applications of RFID on the Internet of things,
under the emerging technologies for tag search, anonymous RFID
authentication, and identification of networked tags. A new technique
called filtering vector (a compact data structure that encodes tag
IDs) is proposed to enable tag filtration, meeting the stringent delay
requirements for real-world applications. Based on filtering vectors,
a novel iterative tag search protocol is designed, which progressively
improves the accuracy of search result and reduces the time of each
iteration by using the information learned from the previous
iterations. Moreover, the protocol is extended to work under noisy
channel. The authors also make a fundamental shift from the
traditional design paradigm for anonymous RFID authentication by
following an asymmetry design principle that pushes most complexity to
the readers while leaving the tags as simple as possible. A novel
technique is developed to dynamically generate random tokens on demand
for authentication. The token-based authentication protocol only
requires O(1) communication overhead and online computation overhead
per authentication for both readers and tags. Finally, the authors
investigate the problem of networked-tag identification. The
traditional contention-based protocol design will incur too much
energy overhead in multihop tag systems, and a reader-coordinated
design that significantly serializes tag transmissions performs much
better. In addition, a solution based on serial numbers is proposed to
achieve load balancing, thereby reducing the worst-case energy cost
among the tags. Designed for researchers and professionals, this
SpringerBrief will interest individuals who work in efficiency,
security, and privacy. Advanced-level students focused on network
design will also benefit from the content.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783319473550
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter