Re: [cfp] Cfp Digest, Vol 71, Issue 12
Hi Christoph,
Vielleicht ist da ja etwas interessantes dabei.
Viele grĂ¼sse, Geli
Am 17.06.2010 um 12:00 schrieb cfp-request@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de:
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Today's Topics:
- Fwd: CFP: Fachgespr?ch "Sensornetze" (Lars Wolf)
- Fwd: REALWSN 2010: one month to submission deadline (Lars Wolf)
- Fwd: [Tccc] Special issue on Wireless Communication in Challenged Environments (Lars Wolf)
- Fwd: [Tccc] CFP- IEEE JSAC on "Game Theory in Wireless Communications" (Lars Wolf)
Message: 1 Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 18:21:42 +0200 From: Lars Wolf wolf@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Subject: [cfp] Fwd: CFP: Fachgespr?ch "Sensornetze" To: cfp cfp@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Message-ID: 4C18FA16.3020304@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: CFP: Fachgespr?ch "Sensornetze" Datum: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 13:13:47 +0200 Von: vt turau@TUHH.DE Antwort an: Mailing List der GI FG 3.3.1 "Kommunikation und Verteilte Systeme" KUVS-L@LISTSERV.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE An: KUVS-L@LISTSERV.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE
- GI/ITG KuVS Fachgespr?ch "Sensornetze"
W?rzburg, 16. - 17. September 2010
Call for Papers
Drahtlose Sensornetze stellen eine viel versprechende Technologie zur Beobachtung und Beeinflussung von Vorg?ngen in der realen Welt dar. Autonome Sensorknoten nehmen dabei Parameter der Umwelt durch Sensoren wahr und k?nnen diese durch Aktoren beeinflussen. Viele solcher autonomen und ressourcenbeschr?nkten Knoten kooperieren dabei mittels drahtloser Kommunikation. Die Eigenschaften dieser Knoten und Netze implizieren eine Vielzahl von neuartigen Herausforderungen, die sich in einer regen Forschungsaktivit?t widerspiegeln.
Ziel dieser Reihe von Fachgespr?chen ist es, Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftlern aus Hochschule und Industrie die M?glichkeit zu einem informellen Gedankenaustausch zu geben und die Kooperation in diesem multidisziplin?ren Forschungsbereich zu verst?rken. Beitr?ge
Im Rahmen des Fachgespr?chs soll die Diskussion gegen?ber der Vortragspr?sentation im Vordergrund stehen. Beitr?ge sollten daher in Form von Extended Abstracts eingereicht werden. Sie sollen 2-4 Seiten umfassen und im doppelspaltigen IEEE Transaction Format f?r Konferenzen in 10pt Schrift auf A4 verfasst werden. Die angenommenen Beitr?ge werden als Technischer Bericht ver?ffentlicht. Termine
Einreichung: 27. Juni 2010 Benachrichtigung: 16. Juli 2010 Anmeldung: 03. August 2010 Fachgespr?ch: 16. - 17. September 2010
Details unter: http://www.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/lehrstuehle/lehrstuhl_fuer_informatik...
Message: 2 Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 18:24:03 +0200 From: Lars Wolf wolf@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Subject: [cfp] Fwd: REALWSN 2010: one month to submission deadline To: cfp cfp@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Message-ID: 4C18FAA3.3070307@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: REALWSN 2010: one month to submission deadline Datum: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 12:54:33 +0200 Von: Thiemo Voigt thiemo@sics.se An: Thiemo thiemo@sics.se CC: census@sics.se
Dear colleagues,
please note that the REALWSN deadline is one month away!
Call for Papers: The Fourth Workshop on Real-World Wireless Sensor Networks ===============================================================
16-17 December, 2010 Colombo, Sri Lanka http://www.ucsc.cmb.ac.lk/realwsn10/
We are excited to announce that the fourth Workshop on Real-World Wireless Sensor will be held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, in December 2010.
The purpose of the fourth Workshop on Real-World Wireless Sensor Networks is to bring together researchers and practitioners working in the area of sensor networks, with focus on real-world experiments or deployments of wireless sensor networks.
When working with real-world experiments or deployments, many new issues arise: the network environment may be composed of a variety of different technologies, leading to very heterogeneous network structures; software development for large scale networks poses new types of problems; prototype networks may differ significantly from the deployed system; actual sensor network deployments may need a complex combination of autonomous and manual configuration. Furthermore, results obtained through simulation are typically not directly applicable to operational networks and it is therefore imperative for the community to produce results from experimental research.
Authors are invited to submit papers (12 pages, Springer format, 9 or 10 point font size) for presentation at the workshop. Papers will be selected based on originality, technical merit and relevance.
Note that we will organize a poster and demo session as well. The deadline will be in the middle of September.
All topics pertaining to real-world wireless sensor networks are of interest, including but not limited to:
- Experiences with real-world deployments
- Experimental validation/refutation of previous simulation results obtained by others
- Real-world performance of self-organization and self-management
- Debugging, testing, and management
- Deployment and configuration
- Applications in medicine, industry, science, environmental monitoring, etc.
- Security and trust
- Scalability in practice
- Development and prototyping platforms
- Operating systems, sensor network programming paradigms, and
languages
- Middleware for heterogeneous networks
- Real-time and dependability issues
- Hardware support for real-world sensor networks
- Robustness at all levels: communication, software, hardware
- Energy efficient protocols
- Hardware and software methods for energy measurement and profiling
Important dates:
- Electronic submissions due: July 16, 2010
- Notification of acceptance: September 10, 2010
- Camera-ready copy due: October 8, 2010
- Workshop: 16-17 December, 2010
Organizers:
Workshop Chair:
- Thiemo Voigt, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden
Technical program committee chairs:
- Peter Corke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
- Pedro Jos? Marron, University of Duisburg-Essen and Fraunhofer IAIS, Germany
Local organizing committee:
- A. R. Weerasinghe, UCSC, Sri Lanka
- T. N. K. De Zoysa, UCSC, Sri Lanka
- C. I. Keppitiyagama, UCSC, Sri Lanka
Technical program committee:
- Muneeb Ali, Princeton University, USA
- Bj?rn Andersson, Polytechnic Institute of Porto, Portugal
- Jan Beutel, ETH Z?rich, Switzerland
- Torsten Braun, University of Bern, Switzerland
- Nirupama Bulusu, Portland State University, USA
- Rachel Cardell-Oliver, University of Western Australia, Australia
- Kasun De Zoysa, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
- Carlo Fischione, KTH Stockholm, Sweden
- Richard Gold, Ericsson, Sweden
- Per Gunningberg, Uppsala University, Sweden
- Wen Hu, CSIRO, Australia
- Polly Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
- Raja Jurdak, CSIRO, Australia
- Chamath Keppitiyagame, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
- Purushottam Kulkarni, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
- Koen Langendoen, TU Delft, The Netherlands
- Hock Beng Lim, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
- Luis Orozco, University of Castilla la Mancha, Spain
- Gian Pietro Picco, University of Trento, Italy
- Utz R?dig, University of Lancaster, UK
- Christian Rohner, Uppsala University, Sweden
- Kay R?mer, ETH Z?rich, Switzerland
- Jochen Schiller, FU Berlin, Germany
- Cormac Sreenan, UC Cork, Ireland
- Arno Wacker, University of Duisburg, Germany
- Tim Wark, CSIRO, Australia
BR, Thiemo
Message: 3 Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 22:24:01 +0200 From: Lars Wolf wolf@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Subject: [cfp] Fwd: [Tccc] Special issue on Wireless Communication in Challenged Environments To: cfp cfp@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Message-ID: 4C1932E1.9020707@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [Tccc] Special issue on Wireless Communication in Challenged Environments Datum: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 14:20:35 -0500 Von: M. Can Vuran mcvuran@cse.unl.edu An: tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
[Apologies in advance, if you receive multiple copies]
========================================= Ad Hoc Networks Journal (Elsevier) Special Issue on WIRELESS COMMUNICATION IN CHALLENGED ENVIRONMENTS =========================================
Guest Editors: Mehmet Can VURAN, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA Wendi HEINZELMAN, University of Rochester, USA Jun-Hong CUI, University of Connecticut, USA Gilles Y. DELISLE, Technology Integration Center, Canada Martine LIENARD, University of Lille, France Cedric WESTPHAL, DoCoMo Labs, USA
************* Paper submission deadline: July 9, 2010 **************
The recent advances in wireless communications and networking have motivated the use of these technologies in environments where no computer has gone before. More specifically, the ubiquitous data gathering, computation, and communication capabilities of tiny sensors motes, microprocessors, and mobile communication devices have recently been exploited in places such as underground mines, tunnels, and soil; underwater environments such as oceans and rivers; the outer space; and locations affected by natural disasters. Wireless communication in these challenged environments is characterized by the direct impact of the physical world environment on the communication and networking performance. Accordingly, the traditional definitions of communication channel, connectivity, network topology, packet route, or message delivery may no longer hold true. To provide the required guarantees for applications in these environments, a fundamental understanding of the environmental impacts on communication as well as the physical layer affects on higher layer protocols is required. Moreover, cross-layer solutions that address the challenges in these environments by incorporating the interactions between the environment and communication performance are beneficial. Consequently, environment-aware solutions that adapt to the changes in their environment can be realized.
This special issue is dedicated to recent advances in communication and networking in challenged environments. Papers describing applications, protocols, analysis models, evaluation methods, and experimental studies are solicited. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
- Network architectures
- Analysis models
- Channel models
- Resiliency, reliability, and robustness
- Communication protocols (transport, routing, MAC, error control,
security)
- Cross-layer design and optimization
- Localization solutions
- Deployment scenarios and experiences
in Challenged Environments including:
- Underground (Mines, tunnels, and soil)
- Underwater
- Space
- Disaster areas
- Urban areas
About the Ad Hoc Networks
The Ad Hoc Networks is an international and archival journal providing a publication vehicle for complete coverage of all topics of interest to those involved in ad hoc and sensor networking areas. The Ad Hoc Networks considers original, high quality and unpublished contributions addressing all aspects of ad hoc and sensor networks.
Submission format
The submitted papers must be written in English and describe original research which is not published nor currently under review by other journals or conferences. Author guidelines for preparation of manuscript can be found at www.elsevier.com/locate/adhoc For more information, please contact the Editor-in-Chief: Ian F. Akyildiz (adhoc@ece.gatech.edu)
Submission Guideline
All manuscripts and any supplementary material should be submitted through Elsevier Editorial System (EES). The authors must select as ?Special Issue: Challenged Environments? when they reach the ?Article Type? step in the submission process. The EES website is located at: http://ees.elsevier.com/adhoc/
Guide for Authors
This site will guide you stepwise through the creation and uploading of you article. The guide for Authors can be found on the journal homepage (www.elsevier.com/adhoc).
Important Dates:
Submission Deadline: July 9, 2010 Notification of Acceptance: October 4, 2010 Camera-Ready Papers Due: December 3, 2010
--
M. Can Vuran, Ph. D. Assistant Professor Cyber-Physical Networking Laboratory Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of Nebraska-Lincoln Lincoln, NE 68588-0115
Office: 109 Schorr Center Phone: (402) 472-5019 Fax: (402) 472-7767 mcvuran@cse.unl.edu http://cpn.unl.edu
Tccc mailing list Tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc
Message: 4 Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 22:24:38 +0200 From: Lars Wolf wolf@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Subject: [cfp] Fwd: [Tccc] CFP- IEEE JSAC on "Game Theory in Wireless Communications" To: cfp cfp@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Message-ID: 4C193306.6090507@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-2
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [Tccc] CFP- IEEE JSAC on "Game Theory in Wireless Communications" Datum: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 12:11:36 -0700 Von: Alireza Attar attar@ece.ubc.ca Antwort an: alireza.attar@ieee.org Organisation: UBC An: tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
================================================================= Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this Call for Papers =================================================================
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
"Game Theory in Wireless Communications"
Wireless communication networks are undergoing a transformation, shifting network intelligence from the core network towards the edges of the network. Correspondingly, the process of decision making in wireless networks is migrating towards more distributed approaches. This calls for adoption of novel analytical approaches to capture the new degrees of freedom available for decision making processes in future communication technologies, fitting examples of which include femto-base-stations in beyond-3G systems and Cognitive Radio Networks (CRNs).
Game theory provides a powerful mathematical framework that can accommodate the preferences and requirements of various stakeholders in a given process as regards the outcome of the process. The application of game theory to the modeling and analysis of wireless networks has received considerable attention in recent years. Game theoretic approaches are multifarious, including among others cooperative and non-cooperative models, static and dynamic games, single-shot and repeated games, and finite- and infinite-horizon games.
This special issue aims to bring together a comprehensive view of the application of game theoretic models to emerging wireless systems. We specially encourage studies that demonstrate the capabilities of game theory in wireless communication when other techniques have failed to produce insight, when complex wireless scenarios have helped advance game- theoretic models, and alternatively when limitations of game theory in practical wireless networks are captured. Hence, original previously un- published contributions are solicited in relevant topics, including but not limited to the following:
- Game theoretic approaches to the design of PHY and MAC layers in
future cellular and broadband technologies
- Game models for cognitive radio and self-organizing networks
- Application of novel solution concepts such as equilibrium or
core solutions in wireless scenarios
- Wireless network analysis using dynamic, stochastic, super-
modular and sub-modular games
- Coalition formation and other cooperative strategies for wireless
radio networks
- Evolutionary game theory for wireless networks
- Radio resource allocation and interference management
- Distributed load balancing, congestion control policies and
routing protocols based on game theory
- Mechanism design in auctions and other wireless applications
- Reinforcement and Q-learning for various wireless network
equilibria, such as the correlated equilibrium
- Analysis of security and privacy in wireless application via game
theory
- Utilization of imperfect/asymmetric information game models in
wireless communications
- Multi-armed and restless bandit problems and their application in
modeling wireless networks
Prospective authors should follow the manuscript format described in the "Information for Authors" section on the IEEE J-SAC website (http://www.jsac.ucsd.edu/Guidelines/info.html ). All papers should be submitted in PDF format via EDAS (http://edas.info <http://edas.info/
).
Important Dates:
- Manuscript Submission Due: January 1, 2011
- First review completed: May 1, 2011
- Revised manuscript due: June 1, 2011
- Notification of acceptance: July 1, 2011
- Final Manuscript Due: September 1, 2011
- Publication: 1st Quarter 2012
Guest Editors:
Dr. Alireza Attar
University of British Columbia (alireza.attar@ieee.org)
Prof. Tamer Ba?ar
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (basar1@illinois.edu)
Prof. M?rouane Debbah
Supelec ( mailto:merouane.debbah@supelec.fr merouane.debbah@supelec.fr )
Prof. H. Vincent Poor
Princeton University (poor@princeton.edu)
Prof. Qing Zhao
University of California Davis (qzhao@ece.ucdavis.edu)
Tccc mailing list Tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc
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End of Cfp Digest, Vol 71, Issue 12
participants (1)
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Angelika Ruppel