COMP90007 Internet Technologies Project 2
Semester 1, 2024
Task:
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Literature Review on Geographic Routing in VANETs (Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks)
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Weighting:
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15%
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Due
Date/Time:
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Group registration: May 3rd (Friday) 5:00pm
Report submission: May 24th (Friday) 5:00pm
A penalty of 10% per day will be applied for every day after the due date.
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Task length:
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Maximum 8 pages for individual work, and 11 pages for group work, including figures, appendices, and references.
The main text of the report, without figures, appendices, and references, is expected to be not less than 4 pages.
Detailed formatting instructions are in the “Required Format” section.
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Submission:
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Submit as a PDF document via Canvas.
Include your project title, your name(s), and student ID(s) on the submission.
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Task
Purpose:
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You will be expected to keep up to date with developments as a professional in computing and information systems. The selected topic Geographic Routing in VANETs is currently generating much research interest in the field. This is an opportunity for you to practice identifying relevant papers, categorising
developments in the field and comparing and critiquing them.
By the end of the task, you will be able to:
. Critically read and interpret a research article
. Compare and contrast research findings
. Write a literature review of a given research topic
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Task
Description:
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You will write a brief literature review on Geographic Routing in VANETs.
You can complete the work individually or in a group of 2 (max.) of your own choice. If working in a group of 2, please register on Canvas before the group registration deadline.
In the review, you are expected to include at least 5 papers in an individual
submission or at least 10 papers if working in a group of 2. You should focus on
reviewing papers on the network solutions, protocols and architectures for this topic.
You are expected to reference all sources using a consistent style, e.g. APA or IEEE.
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Your literature review should include the following sections.
. Introduction (1 page)
. Related work (3 pages - individual; 5 pages – group of 2)
. Categorisation and comparison of key approaches, e.g. discussing
advantages and disadvantages (1 page – individual; 2 pages – group of 2)
. Conclusions and future directions (1 page)
. References (0.5- 1 page)
Notes: The length of each section is recommended, not mandatory. The main text of the report, without figures, appendices, and references, is expected to be not less
than 4 pages.
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Required
Format:
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Page size A4 with 2.54cm (1-inch) margins.
Main text: 12-point Times New Roman font, single column with 1.5 line spacing
References: using a consistent style, e.g. APA or IEEE, single column with 1.0 line spacing
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Assessment Criteria:
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Your work will be assessed on:
. Format and structure (2 points)
. Range of papers included in the literature review (4 points)
. Description/summary of the papers selected for the literature review (4 points)
. Categorisation and comparison of papers/approaches (3 points)
. Future directions and concluding discussion (2 points)
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Notes:
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(1) All explanations should be your own words and proper citations should be used when needed. Individuals/Teams should work independently of each other on
this project, not sharing the information about papers you found with students
outside your team. This is important because finding is a part of this experience. Your submissions will be examined for originality and will invoke the
University’s Academic Misconduct policy where either inappropriate level of collaboration or plagiarism are deemed to have taken place.
(2) If in a group of 2, both members of the group should contribute equally to the task and will receive the same mark. If you feel the work has been unequal, report it to your tutors. This will be carefully reviewed, and mark adjustments may be made if necessary.
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Guidelines
For a literature review, you are expected to not only list top papers in an area but also categorise these developments/approaches and compare/critique them. This is at the core of the literature review. A list of papers with comments only is called an “annotated bibliography” and is not the purpose of this project. You should categorise and compare approaches from various perspectives, such as assumptions about the characteristics of the environment (e.g., city vs. highway) and the characteristics of the network, delivery guarantees, scalability, overhead, latency, and/or security. These criteria are examples; you should select appropriate criteria based on the selection of papers you are focusing on. You may also consider using clear visualisations such as figures, flow charts, and tables to present different approaches and comparisons.
The topic we have chosen is something you would already be partially familiar with. You should initially start reading Wikipedia articles, news, and similar web pages to get a high- level idea of what geographic routing and VANETs are. Then, you should use scholar.google.com or a similar scholarly publication search engine to perform. a more detailed background search and do further reading on geographic routing in VANETs. The number of citations a paper gets in scholar.google.com is an indicator of its leadership in the field. It is important to note that if you log in to the University’s library with your student credentials, you will be able to access papers that are returned by these engines free of charge in most cases.
You are encouraged to find other literature review papers (also called survey papers) that already exist on these topics. Find one that is recent and relevant. Better, find many, and you will note that authors look at similar but not the same set of algorithms/protocols. They may also have different classifications. These should give you an idea of what common/popular methods exist and what key comparison parameters you can have between solutions. They are also a good example of how to write a literature review. However, you cannot use a literature review paper or a book as a sole source for your report and/or directly take their approach.
The project is expected to be completed in 3-4 weeks in total. For example, the stages of your project can be summarised as follows: Background search/reading selected papers (should not take more than 10 days and can be done in 1 week), organisation of your report/drafting key points of your sections (1 week), finishing your report (1 week). When reading the papers, please note that a technical paper is not read like a novel, i.e., not read from cover to cover sequentially, but is read in a manner that you can quickly grasp the key ideas, benefits/disadvantages. This is enough for writing a literature review. For this project, we do not expect you to learn every paper in detail and be overly comprehensive about the topic but rather cover the key papers, classifications/parameters.
Some useful links for literature review writing are below for your reference:
. https://students.unimelb.edu.au/academic-skills/explore-our-resources/report- writing/reviewing-the-literature
. https://library.unimelb.edu.au/recite