Click on “Download PDF” for the PDF version or on the title for the HTML version. If you are not an ASABE member or if your employer has not arranged for access to the full-text, Click here for options. A Node and Network Level Self-Healing Distributed Wireless Sensor Architecture for Greenhouse Based Plant Monitoring SystemsPublished by the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, St. Joseph, Michigan www.asabe.org Citation: 2010 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, June 20 - June 23, 2010 1009468.(doi:10.13031/2013.29913)Authors: Gregory M Striemer, David Story, Ali Akoglu, Murat Kacira Keywords: Crop Monitoring, Greenhouse, Field Programmable Gate Arrays, Visual Sensor Networks, Wireless Sensors. Visual Sensor Networks (VSN) has emerged as a new paradigm by giving a sensor the capability to perceive and analyze its surrounding. Creating an environment of no doubt is essential for a contact free plant monitoring system in a greenhouse environment equipped with VSN. Methods to monitor a systems health, and respond to hardware anomalies automatically are essential. With reconfigurable devices, such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), designers are provided with a seductive tool to use as a basis for adopting the hardwares configuration to the needs of the application. In this study, we designed a distributed wireless architecture with self-configuration capability at network level and fault recovery capability at node level in the context of image processing algorithms (Discrete Cosine, Discrete Wavelet Transforms, and Color Space Conversion). The experimental results showed that the test bed comprised of wirelessly connected Xilinx Virtex5 FPGAs is able to achieve node level fault detection and healing within 2.18 seconds and network level healing in 5.43 seconds. The application of the proposed architecture in greenhouse based plant production is significant towards building a robust system for monitoring and sensing the climate conditions and plant status. Developing adaptive plant-response based climate control strategies in controlled environment plant production will also considerably contribute to resource savings (i.e. water, nutrients, and energy). (Download PDF) (Export to EndNotes)
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