+\textcolor{blue}{\textbf{\textsc{Answer:} All rounds have the same duration. It is explicitly explained
+ in paragraph ... in section .... This assumption leads to an integer formulation of the optimization problem. The decision variables are binary variables, $X_{t,j}$ for the activation ($X_{t,j}=1$) or not ($X_{t,j}=0$) of the sensor $j$ during the round $t$. Column generation based approaches can be applied when the decision variables of the optimization problem are continuous. In this case the variables are the time intervals during which the sensors of a cover set (not necessarily disjoint) are active. The time intervals are not equal. Concerning the choice of round duration of equal length, it is correlated
+ with the types of applications, with the amount of initial energy in sensors
+ batteries, and also with the duration of the exchange phase. All
+ applications do not have the same Quality of Service requirements. In our
+ case, information exchange is executed every hour, but the length of the
+ sensing period could be reduced and adapted dynamically. On the one hand, a
+ small sensing period would allow the network to be more reliable but would
+ have higher communication costs. On the other hand, the choice of a long
+ duration may cause problems in case of nodes failure during the sensing
+ period. }}\\