ITCRJan 6, 2014

When Does Relay Transmission Give a More Secure Connection in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks?

arXiv:1401.0994v152 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses security concerns in decentralized wireless networks, providing analytical insights for network designers, but it is incremental as it builds on existing relay transmission models.

The paper tackles the problem of whether relay transmission improves secure communication in wireless ad hoc networks with eavesdroppers, deriving exact expressions and lower bounds for secure connection probability and proposing a relay selection strategy to enhance it.

Relay transmission can enhance coverage and throughput, while it can be vulnerable to eavesdropping attacks due to the additional transmission of the source message at the relay. Thus, whether or not one should use relay transmission for secure communication is an interesting and important problem. In this paper, we consider the transmission of a confidential message from a source to a destination in a decentralized wireless network in the presence of randomly distributed eavesdroppers. The source-destination pair can be potentially assisted by randomly distributed relays. For an arbitrary relay, we derive exact expressions of secure connection probability for both colluding and non-colluding eavesdroppers. We further obtain lower bound expressions on the secure connection probability, which are accurate when the eavesdropper density is small. By utilizing these lower bound expressions, we propose a relay selection strategy to improve the secure connection probability. By analytically comparing the secure connection probability for direct transmission and relay transmission, we address the important problem of whether or not to relay and discuss the condition for relay transmission in terms of the relay density and source-destination distance. These analytical results are accurate in the small eavesdropper density regime.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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