This book comprehensively covers a wide range of topics from the smart transportation domain. It discusses protocols, applications, and security concerns in various vehicular networks using examples and easy-to-understand figures. The book's first four chapters focus on vehicular network protocols and applications, while the remaining four chapters incorporate security, trust, and privacy issues with examples from real-life cases. The book concludes with a vision of what to expect in the near future and will be an invaluable resource for anybody interested in this nascent technology and its variegated applications.
Dr. Lewis M. Mackenzie is a Senior Lecturer in Computing Science at the University of Glasgow.
Dr. Niaz Chowdhury is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Knowledge Media Institute, the Open University in England.
This book covers the security, trust and privacy issues, the threats in various forms of vehicular networks, and the countermeasures available, using examples and easy-to-understand figures.
Preface |
|
vii | |
Editors |
|
ix | |
|
|
xi | |
|
1 A review of Internet of Things (IoT) using visible light optical camera communication in smart cars |
|
|
1 | (18) |
|
|
2 Accident warning and collision avoidance systems |
|
|
19 | (20) |
|
|
3 Behavior analysis of broadcast schemes in vehicular accident warning systems against the two-second driving rule |
|
|
39 | (28) |
|
|
|
4 The uses of big data in smart city transportation to accelerate the business growth |
|
|
67 | (18) |
|
|
5 A genetic blockchain approach for securing smart vehicles in quantum era |
|
|
85 | (24) |
|
|
|
|
6 An overview of the autonomous vehicle system, security, risks, and a way forward |
|
|
109 | (42) |
|
|
|
7 Statistical in-depth security analysis for vehicle to everything communication over 5G NETWORK |
|
|
151 | (36) |
|
|
|
8 Security analysis for VANET-based accident warning systems |
|
|
187 | |
|
|
Dr. Lewis M. Mackenzie is a Senior Lecturer in Computing Science at the University of Glasgow. His primary research interests are in machine architectures, the performance modelling of communication systems, vehicular networks and usable security. Dr Mackenzie's recently published work has involved the modelling of traffic patterns in a variety of scenarios from regular wormhole-switched multi-computer interconnects to mobile ad-hoc wireless networks (MANETs), the secure use of vehicular ad hoc networks in safety applications, graphical authentication mechanisms and wearable technology. He is also co-author of a recent book on the limits of computation.
Dr. Niaz Chowdhury is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Knowledge Media Institute, the Open University in England where his primary research interests are Wireless Networks, Internet of Things (IoT), Smart City, Machine Learning and Big Data Analysis. Prior to this, he took another postdoc position in the Department of Computing and Communication of the same university where he worked within the smart city project MK-Smart. Dr. Chowdhury obtained his PhD from the School of Computing Science, University of Glasgow as a recipient of the highly competitive Scottish ORS Scholarship. He was also a research scholar at the School of Computer Science in Trinity College Dublin where he received prestigious Govt. of Ireland IRCSET Embark Initiative Scholarship. Dr. Chowdhury is also a qualified engineer graduating in Computer Science and Engineering with a bachelor and a masters degree with Gold Medal distinction from East West University, Bangladesh. His recent publications include security issues in Vehicular Ad hoc Networks, and design and performance analysis of wireless protocols of various kinds in journals, conference proceedings and book chapter.