Von: "Danda B. Rawat" <dbrawat.cfp@gmail.com>
Datum: 9. September 2011 03:16:25 MESZ
An: tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu, dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de, discuss@ieeetcsc.org, imc-communication@lists.indymedia.org, mycolleagues@grid.lrg.ufsc.br
Betreff: [Tccc] CFP: Recent Advances in Vehicular Communications and Networking: Special Issue of Elsevier Journal of Ad Hoc Networks
[Apologies if you receive multiple copies.]
CALL FOR PAPERS
Elsevier Journal of Ad Hoc Networks( http://www.elsevier.com/locate/adhoc SCI
Indexed, 2010 Impact Factor: 1.592)
Special Issue of Ad Hoc Networks on Recent Advances in Vehicular
Communications and Networking
The pdf version of this CFP is available at
http://www.elsevierscitech.com/dronsite/cfp/CFPRecentAdvances_VehicularCommunications_Networking.pdf
OR at http://www.wireless-communications.net
Vehicular communication for intelligent transportation systems (ITS) plays
an increasingly important role in people’s lives since it provides safety as
well as comfort for passengers and enables more efficient travel by
providing timely information to operators of vehicles and concerned
authorities. As a result, there will be a strong demand for wireless
communications and networking to provide information as well as onboard
entertainment services to passengers and driver. Vehicular communication is
expected to implement a variety of wired and wireless technologies for
Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) and Vehicle-to-Roadside (V2R) communications. In
Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs) for V2V systems, communication may
experience serious deterioration due to the lack of accurate channel state
information and advanced radio-resource-allocation schemes to assign
wireless resources to high-speed vehicles. Moreover, communication among
high-speed vehicles through cellular communication networks causes frequent
handovers and drop-offs resulting in degradation in overall system
performance. This motivates researchers to design innovative resource
allocation techniques and robust, as well as, fast handover schemes for
dynamically changing topologies of VANETs. In VANETs for V2V communications,
trust, security, privacy, and reliable routing are major concerns since the
network topology changes constantly. Furthermore, physical layer design
issues for wireless communications in high-speed mobile environments are
also of vital importance to realize its full potential for ITS. All in all,
vehicular communications with dynamically changing topologies is a demanding
research topic. The goal of this issue is to bring together the state of the
art research contributions that focus on vehicular communications and
networking.
In particular, the topics of interest include but are not limited to
· Physical Layer and Propagation Models.
· Radio Resource and Interference Management.
· Medium Access Control and Routing Protocols.
· Information Aggregation and Dissemination.
· Positioning and Location Technologies.
· Sensor Technologies for VANETs.
· Drive-Through Internet and Roadside Infrastructures.
· Incident Detection for VANETs.
· Trust, Security, and Privacy Issues.
· Fast and Reliable Handover and Mobility Management
· Vehicle Traffic Models.
· Heterogeneous Networking.
· Cellular and Satellite Communications for Vehicular Networking.
· Cross-Layer Designs and Architectures.
· Game Theory Based Protocols and Algorithms.
· Green Vehicular Communications and Networking.
· Cloud-Based Vehicular Communications and Networking.
· Standardization and Development, such as WAVE/DSRC/802.11p
· Applications, Case Studies, and Real-World Test Beds.
· Business Models and Policies.
--------------------------------------------
Submission Format and Guideline:
-----------------------------------------------
All submitted papers must be written in English and contain only original
work, which has not been published by or is not currently under review for
any other journal or conference. Papers must not exceed 25 pages
(one-column, at least 11pt font) including figures, tables, and references.
A detailed submission guideline is available as “Guide to Authors” at
www.elsevier.com/locate/adhoc.
All manuscripts and any supplementary material should be submitted through
Elsevier Editorial System (EES). The authors must select as “SI – Advances
in VCN” when they reach the “Article Type” step in the submission process.
The EES website is located at: http://ees.elsevier.com/adhoc/
All papers will be peer-reviewed by three independent reviewers. Requests
for additional information should be addressed to the guest editors.
-------------------------
Guest Editors:
-------------------------
Danda B. Rawat, (Corresponding Editor) Old Dominion University (db.rawat AT
ieee.org)
Geert Heijenk, University of Twente (geert.Heijenk AT utwente.nl)
Michele C. Weigle, Old Dominion University (mweigle AT cs.odu.edu)
Bhed B. Bista, Iwate Prefectural University (bbb AT iwate-pu.ac.jp)
Yuh-Shyan Chen, National Taipei University (yschen AT gm.ntpu.edu.tw)
------------------------------
Important Dates:
-------------------------------
Paper submission deadline: November 1, 2011.
Decision notification: January 15, 2012.
Final Manuscript Due: February 15, 2012.
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_______________________________________________
IEEE Communications Society Tech. Committee on Computer Communications
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