Fwd: [Tccc] CFP: Feature Topic on IoT on IEEE ComMag: Submission extension
-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [Tccc] CFP: Feature Topic on IoT on IEEE ComMag: Submission extension Datum: Thu, 13 Jan 2011 08:31:54 -0500 Von: Chatschik Bisdikian bisdik@us.ibm.com An: tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- *** New Submission Deadline: JANUARY 30, 2011 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Papers
IEEE Communications Magazine Feature Topic Issue on The Internet of Things
The Internet has experienced a tremendous growth in the past three decades, evolving from a network of a few hundred hosts to a platform linking billions of “things” globally, including individual people as well as enterprises of various sizes, through computers of any conceivable size and capability and the applications running on them. The growth of Internet shows no signs of slowing down and it steadily becomes the cause of a new pervasive paradigm in computing and communications. This new paradigm enhances the traditional Internet into a smart Internet of Things (IoT) created around intelligent interconnections of diverse objects in the physical world, such as vehicles, cellphones, habitats and habitat occupants, through low-cost information gathering devices, such as sensors and RFID tags, that facilitate fast-paced interactions among the objects themselves as well as the objects and persons in any place and at any time. IoT will usher a wide range of smart applications and services to cope with many of the challenges that individuals and organizations face in their everyday lives. For example, remote healthcare monitoring systems will help alleviate the severe shortage of healthcare personnel in an ageing society; intelligent transportation systems will help reduce traffic congestion and inevitably ills caused by it such as air-pollution; smart distribution systems from utility grids to supply chains will improve the quality and reduce the cost of their respective goods and services; tagged objects can be recycled more efficiently by being retrieved from bulk waste disposal, and so on. These applications would dramatically change the way our societies function and thus have a big impact on many aspects of people’s life in the years to come. IoT is not a mere extension of today’s Internet or an internet of Internet systems. It represents intelligent end-to-end systems that enable smart solutions and as such it covers a diverse range of technologies, including sensing, communications, networking, computing, information processing, and intelligent control technologies. To make IoT a reality, significant research needs to be conducted within and across these technological aspects of IoT. This has recently motivated a voluminous amount of research activities in the hot field and this Feature Topic Issue intends to capture and expose it to the IEEE ComMag readership.
Scope of the issue
This feature topic issue aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the state-of-the-art development in technology, application, and standardization in the field of the Internet of Things, and present an insight of future research opportunities and challenges in this field. The feature issue will consider original survey and research articles written in a tutorial style. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
* Network and system architectures of IoT * Sensing technologies for IoT * Short-range Communications for IoT * Sensor networking technologies for IoT * Access network technologies for IoT * Information processing, management, and distribution in IoT * RFID applications in IoT * Smart grid applications in IoT * Healthcare applications in IoT * Environmental monitoring applications in IoT * Intelligent transportation applications in IoT * Public safety in IoT * Security and privacy management for IoT * Application systems and testbeds for IoT * Standardization activities for IoT
Manuscript Submission
Authors should submit their manuscripts in PDF format electronically via the Manuscript Central (http://commag-ieee.manuscriptcentral.com). Articles should be tutorial in nature and should be written in a style comprehensible to readers outside the specialty of the field. Authors must follow the IEEE Communications Magazine’s guidelines for preparation of their manuscripts. Complete guidelines for prospective authors can be found at www.comsoc.org/pubs/commag/sub_guidelines.html.
Important Dates
- Paper submission deadline: January 30, 2011 ** New date - Acceptance notification: May 30, 2011 - Revised manuscript due: July 15, 20011 - Final manuscript due: August 15, 2011 - Publication date: November, 2011
Guest Editors
Jun Zheng Southeast University, China Email: junzheng@seu.edu.cn
David Simplot-Ryl INRIA Research Centre Lille - Nord Europe, France Email: David.Simplot-Ryl@inria.fr
Chatschik Bisdikian IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, USA Email: bisdik@us.ibm.com
Hussein T. Mouftah University of Ottawa, Canada Email: mouftah@site.uottawa.ca
_______________________________________________ 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
participants (1)
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Lars Wolf