Jason Haas <jasonhaas@ieee.org> schrieb:

Call for Papers for VANET 2011 The Eighth ACM International Workshop on VehiculAr Inter-NETworking September 23, 2011, Las Vegas, NV, USA http://husky.crhc.illinois.edu/vanet2011/ in conjunction with ACM MobiCom 2011
Important Dates ----------------------- Paper Registration Deadline: April 22, 2011 Paper Submission Deadline: April 29, 2011 (was April 22, 2011) Notification of Acceptance: June 24, 2011 Camera-Ready Deadline: July 14, 2011 PDF version - http://husky.crhc.illinois.edu/vanet2011/vanet2011cfp.pdf TXT version - http://husky.crhc.illinois.edu/vanet2011/vanet2011cfp.txt Scope --------- Wireless vehicular communications has been identified as a key technology for increasing road safety, transport efficiency, and providing Internet access on the move to ensure wireless ubiquitous connectivity. Based on short- and medium-range communication like DSRC or WiFi as well as long-range cellular systems, vehicular networking will enable vehicular safety applications (including collision avoidance and safety warnings), efficiency applications (e.g., real-time traffic congestion and routing information), and other commercial or public authority applications (high-speed tolling, mobile infotainment, and many others). The ACM VANET 2011 workshop intends to cover a widening range of research topics, which are related to vehicular networking applications, services, and systems. Beyond systems that are integrated into vehicles, the workshop scope includes, e.g., vehicle- or traffic-related smartphone applications. The great potential of this technology has been acknowledged with the establishment of ambitious research programs on vehicular communication systems worldwide, such as the current InteractIVe and eCoMOVE projects within the European eSafety framework, various US programs derived from USDOT projects, and the Japanese Smartway and Advanced Safety Vehicle programs. Furthermore, vehicular communication and networking also present a very active field of standardization activities worldwide, like ISO TC204, IEEE (802.11p and 1609.x), and SAE J2735 in the US, ETSI TC ITS and CEN WG278 in Europe and ARIB T-75 in Japan, as well as field trials like the large-scale Safety Pilot in the US, simTD in Germany and SCORE-F in France. The Eighth ACM International Workshop on VehiculAr Inter-NETworking (ACM VANET 2011) will cover all vehicular wireless networking aspects using a variety of wireless communication techniques (from short-range DSRC/WiFi to long-range cellular communication). The topics not only cover the design and implementation of vehicular communication systems and applications but also include the potential implications on transport efficiency and safety, liability issues, standardizations efforts, and spectrum assignment. - Areas of interest include, but are not limited to: - Channel modeling, modulation and coding - Congestion control and scalability issues - Medium access control protocols - Multi-channel organization and operation - Communication protocol design and network management - Safety and non-safety applications - Vehicle-to-vehicle/roadside/Internet communication - Simulation frameworks - Field operational testing - Security issues and countermeasures, and privacy issues - Telematics applications - Electric vehicle applications - Networking to reduce energy consumption - Wireless in-car networks - Systems that reduce driver distraction - "Reduced functionalities" DSRC systems for pedestrians, road workers, etc. - Vehicle or traffic-related smartphone apps Organizing Committee
General Co-Chairs: John Kenney, Toyota InfoTechnology Center, USA Marco Gruteser, Rutgers University, USA Technical Program Co-Chairs: Marc Torrent-Moreno, Barcelona Digital Centre Tecnologic, Spain Fan Bai, General Motors Research, USA Publicity/Website Chair: Jason Haas, Sandia National Laboratories, USA Technical Program Committee:
Tarek Abdelzaher, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Onur Altintas, Toyota InfoTechnology Center Guohong Cao, The Pennsylvania State University Eylem Ekici, The Ohio State University Tamer ElBatt, Nile University Andreas Festag, NEC Laboratories Europe Hannes Hartenstein, University of Karlsruhe Daniel Jiang, Mercedes-Benz Research & Development North America, Inc. Frank Kargl, University of Twente Edward Knightly, Rice University P. R. Kumar, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Ken Laberteaux, Toyota Research Chuhee Lee, Volskswagen-Audi Martin Mauve, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf Tamer Nadeem, Old Dominion University Ragunathan Rajkumar, Carnegie Mellon University Paolo Santi, IIT-CNR Björn Scheuermann, University of Würzburg Seung-Woo Seo, Seoul National University, Korea Daniel Stancil, North Carolina State University Ozan Tonguz, Carnegie Mellon University Andre Weimerskirch, escrypt Inc. Please contact the General Chair or Technical Program Co-Chairs for more information.
IEEE Communications Society Tech. Committee on Computer Communications (TCCC) - for discussions on computer networking and communication. Tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc