Introducing participatory fairness in emergency communication can support self-organization for survival
1TU Delft, Systems Engineering and Simulations, Delft, The Netherlands. i.banerjee@tudelft.nl.
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Summary
This study introduces a fair communication system for disaster zones, ensuring everyone can connect by dynamically using phones with higher battery levels as network hubs. This approach bridges the digital divide caused by power outages.
Area of Science:
- Computer Science
- Network Engineering
- Disaster Management
Background:
- Disaster-stricken communities need reliable communication for self-organized rescue when infrastructure fails.
- Power outages during disasters create a digital divide due to unequal phone battery charges.
Purpose of the Study:
- To propose a value-based emergency communication system ensuring participatory fairness and equal communication opportunities.
- To design an infrastructure-less mobile network that dynamically adapts to battery disparities.
Main Methods:
- Developed an infrastructure-less emergency communication network protocol.
- Implemented dynamic hub assignment prioritizing high-battery phones.
- Utilized agent-based simulations to compare network performance against traditional mesh networks.
- Employed the Gini coefficient to evaluate fairness and network lifetime.
Main Results:
- The proposed network dynamically assigns high-battery phones as hubs, adapting topology based on charge levels.
- The system self-organizes for robustness against link failures and device departures.
- Comparative simulations demonstrated the novelty of the mobile protocol over mesh networks.
- Gini coefficient evaluation confirmed fairer participation and extended network lifetime.
Conclusions:
- The value-based emergency communication system promotes participatory fairness in disaster scenarios.
- The dynamic, infrastructure-less network enhances communication opportunities for all community members.
- This approach improves disaster resilience by ensuring equitable access to communication.