Difference between revisions of "SENSORCOMM 2009"
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{{Event | {{Event | ||
− | + | |Acronym=SENSORCOMM 2009 | |
− | + | |Title=The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications | |
− | + | |Type=Conference | |
− | + | |Field=Computer networking | |
− | + | |Superevent=NetWare 2009 | |
− | + | |Start date=2009/06/14 | |
− | + | |End date=2009/06/19 | |
− | + | |Homepage=www.iaria.org/conferences2009/SENSORCOMM09.html | |
− | + | |City=Athens | |
− | + | |Country=Greece | |
− | + | |Submission deadline=2009/01/20 | |
− | + | |Notification=2009/02/25 | |
− | + | |Camera ready=2009/03/20 | |
− | |||
}} | }} | ||
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=The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications= | =The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications= | ||
Revision as of 17:50, 24 November 2008
SENSORCOMM 2009 | |
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The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications
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Subevent of | NetWare 2009 |
Dates | 2009/06/14 (iCal) - 2009/06/19 |
Homepage: | www.iaria.org/conferences2009/SENSORCOMM09.html |
Location | |
Location: | Athens, Greece |
Loading map... | |
Important dates | |
Submissions: | 2009/01/20 |
Notification: | 2009/02/25 |
Camera ready due: | 2009/03/20 |
Table of Contents | |
The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications
The SENSORCOMM 2009 (The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications) is a multi-track event covering related topics on theory and practice on wired and wireless sensors and sensor networks.
Sensors and sensor networks have become a highly active research area because of their potential of providing diverse services to broad range of applications, not only on science and engineering, but equally importantly on issues related to critical infrastructure protection and security, health care, the environment, energy, food safety, and the potential impact on the quality of all areas of life.
As a multi-track event, SENSORCOMM 2009 will serve as a forum for researchers from the academia and the industry, professionals, standard developers, policy makers and practitioners to exchange ideas. The topics could be on techniques and applications, best practices, awareness and experiences as well as future trends and needs (both in research and practices) related to all aspects of information security, security systems and technologies.
Sensor networks and sensor-based systems support many applications today on the ground. Underwateroperations and applications are quite limited by comparison. Most applications refer to remotely controlled submersibles and wide-area data collection systems at a coarse granularity.
The conference has the following independents tracks:
- APASN: Architectures, protocols and algorithms of sensor networks
- MECSN: Energy, management and control of sensor networks
- RASQOFT: Resource allocation, services, QoS and fault tolerance in sensor networks
- PESMOSN: Performance, simulation and modelling of sensor networks
- SEMOSN: Security and monitoring of sensor networks
- SECSED: Sensor circuits and sensor devices
- RIWISN: Radio issues in wireless sensor networks
- SAPSN: Software, applications and programming of sensor networks
- DAIPSN: Data allocation and information in sensor networks
- DISN: Deployments and implementations of sensor networks
We welcome technical papers presenting research and practical results, position papers addressing the pros and cons of specific proposals, such as those being discussed in the standard fora or in industry consortia, survey papers addressing the key problems and solutions on any of the above topics short papers on work in progress, and panel proposals.
The topics suggested by the conference can be discussed in term of concepts, state of the art, standards, implementations, running experiments and applications. Authors are invited to submit complete unpublished papers, which are not under review in any other conference or journal in the following, but not limited topic areas. Industrial presentations are not subject to these constraints. Tutorials on specific related topics and panels on challenging areas are encouraged.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following tracks in sensor networks
- APASN: Architectures, Protocols and Algorithms of Sensor Networks
- Network planning, provisioning and deployment
- Network Architectures for Sensor Networks
- Network Protocols for Sensor Networks
- Structural design
- Distributed Sensor Networks
- Dynamic sensor networks
- Scalable and heterogeneous architectures
- Hierarchical clustering architectures
- Group-based Architectures
- Network topologies
- Mesh networking
- Device centric sensor networks
- Distributed coordination algorithms
- Topology construction
- Routing protocols
- Routing Metrics
- Distributed Algorithms
- Attribute-based named nets.
- Mobility and Scalability
- Attribute-based named Sensor Networks
- Query optimization
- Self-organization and self-configuration algorithms
- Reconfigurability
- Time Synchronization
- MAC protocols for sensor networks (801.11, 802.15.4, UWB, etc)
- Location and time service
- Integration with other systems
- Distributed inference and fusion
- Cross-layer design and optimization
- Complexity analysis of algorithms
- Sensor networks and the Web
- Integration with other systems (e.g., Web-based information systems, process control, enterprise software, etc.)
- Target tracking
- RFID tags
- Traffic scheduling
- MECSN: Management, Energy and Control of Sensor Networks
- Energy models
- Energy optimization
- Energy management
- Power-aware and energy-efficient design
- Power sources in sensor networks
- Battery technology
- Power management
- Algorithms and theories for management
- Communication strategies for topology control
- Algorithms and theories for supervisory control
- Sensor tasking and control
- Distributed control and actuation
- Location and mobility management
- Bandwidth management
- Distributed networked sensing
- Resource provisioning
- Resource management and dynamic resource management
- Schemes to maximize accuracy and minimize false alarms
- Online self-calibration and self-testing
- Handoff and mobility management and seamless internetworking
- Distributed actuation and control
- Topology control
- RASQOFT: Resource Allocation, Services, QoS and Fault Tolerance in Sensor Networks:
- Algorithms to support quality of service in sensor networks
- Protocols to support quality of service in sensor networks
- QoS/SLA in sensor networks
- Provisioning of QoS in terms of bandwidth and delay assurance
- System services and distributed services in sensor networks
- Delay tolerant networks and opportunistic networking
- Failure resilience and fault isolation
- Information assurance in sensor networks
- Fault tolerance and reliability
- Admission control
- Resource allocation and fairness
- Real-time resource scheduling
- Scheduling and optimisation
- Capacity planning
- PESMOSN: Performance, Simulation and Modelling of Sensor Networks
- Performance measurement of sensor networks
- Performance evaluation and analysis of sensor networks
- Performance comparison on capacity, coverage and connectivity
- Modelling techniques of sensor networks
- Validation of sensor network architectures
- Simulation and theoretical analysis
- Simulation software tools and environments
- Theoretical performance analysis: complexity, correctness and scalability.
- Design, simulation and optimization tools for deployment and operation
- Platform modelling and analysis tools
- Analytical, mobility and validation models
- System debugging and testing
- SEMOSN: Security and Monitoring of Sensor Networks
- Security and privacy in sensor networks
- Reliability aspects in sensor networks
- Monitoring distributed sensor networks
- Mechanisms for authentication
- Secure communication in sensor networks
- Encryption algorithms for sensor networks
- Sensor secure management
- Data integrity
- Trustworthiness issues in sensor networks
- Trade-off analysis
- SECSED: Sensor Circuits and Sensor Devices
- Methods for sensor deployment
- Instrumentation and models for deployment of sensors networks
- Sensor architecture
- Abstractions for modular design
- Design and deployment of embedded system platforms
- Embedded architectures and tools
- Embedded processors
- Embedded chip design
- Micro and Nano devices
- Biosensors
- Optical sensors
- Smart sensors
- Acoustic Sensors
- Microwave sensors
- Middleware design
- Sensor Prototypes
- Sensor node components
- Sensor interfaces
- Actuators
- Independent Component Analysis
- Design of cost effective and economical sensors
- Smart Material Applications to design sensors
- Microfabrication Technologies for Microsystem Integration
- Integration of sensors into engineered systems
- Hardware platforms
- Test-beds incorporating multiple sensors
- Operating system and middleware support
- RIWISN: Radio Issues in Wireless Sensor Networks
- Wireless Sensor Communications
- Network connectivity & longevity
- Tracking objects
- Geo-location problems
- Network coverage
- Algorithms for sensor localization and tracking
- Detection, classification and estimation
- Physical layer impact on higher level protocols
- Directional and smart antennas for sensor networks
- Coverage maintenance
- Transceiver and antenna design
- Ubiquitous wireless connectivity
- SAPSN: Software, Applications and Programming of Sensor Networks
- Applications and demonstrations of sensor networks
- Software platforms and development tools
- Architectural design and optimization tools for sensor nodes
- Computation and programming models of sensor networks
- Languages and operating systems of Sensors
- Programming and Interfacing
- Programming abstraction
- Programming models for sensors
- Programming methodology for sensor environments
- Intelligent sensor theory and applications
- Machine learning applications to sensor networks
- Wireless sensor applications
- Applications for sensor network management.
- Software tools for chip programming
- Application requirements
- Application evaluation and comparison
- Demos and prototype testing
- DAIPSN: Data Allocation and Information Processing in Sensor Networks
- Techniques for the interpretation and use of sensor data in decision-making processes
- Distributed data processing
- Distributed signal processing
- Array signal processing
- Statistical signal processing
- Distributed query processing
- Distributed information processing
- Distributed algorithms for collaborative information and signal processing
- Task allocation, reprogramming and reconfiguration
- Coding and information theory
- In-network processing and aggregation
- Data analysis and visualisation
- Data storage in sensor networks
- Data retrieval
- Data dissemination
- Data compression and aggregation
- Data transport in wireless sensor networks
- Data gathering and fusion in wireless sensor networks
- Theories and models on fundamental information and communication aspects of sensor networks
- Redundancy
- DISN: Deployments and Implementations of Sensor Networks
- Methods for sensor networks deployment
- Practical implementations and real-world experiences
- Real-life deployments
- System implementation
- End-user aspects
- Operational experience and test-beds
- Industrial and commercial developments and applications
- Measurements from experimental systems, test-beds and demonstrations
- Intelligent sensors, body sensors and their utilisation
- Analysis of real-world systems and fundamental limits
- Smart Sensors for building surveillance
- Sensing in health care
- Games using sensor networks
- Peer-to-peer, overlay, and content distribution wireless sensor networks
- Use cases (e.g., Automotive, Battlefield, Defense, Construction, Disaster recovery, Environmental, Medical, Security, Biomedical, ** Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, etc.)
- Sensor networks for Rural and Agricultural environments
- Sensors for railway systems
- Pattern Recognition
- Machine Intelligence
- Sensor-equipped Smart Environment
- Deployments in Harsh Environments
- Potential application areas
INSTRUCTION FOR THE AUTHORS
The SENSORCOMM 2009 Proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press and on-line via IEEE XPlore Digital Library. IEEE will index the papers with major indexes. Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit extended versions to one of the IARIA Journals.
- Important deadlines:
- Submission (full paper): January 20, 2009
- Authors notification: February 25, 2009
- Registration: March 15, 2009
- Camera ready: March 20, 2009
Only .pdf or .doc files will be accepted for paper submission. All received papers will be acknowledged via an automated system.
Final author manuscripts will be 8.5" x 11" (two columns IEEE format), not exceeding 6 pages; max 4 extra pages allowed at additional cost. The formatting instructions can be found on the Instructions page. Helpful information for paper formatting can be found on the here.
Once you receive the notification of paper acceptance, you will be provided by the IEEE CS Press an online author kit with all the steps an author needs to follow to submit the final version. The author kits URL will be included in the letter of acceptance.
Poster Forum
Posters on work-in-progress are welcome. Please submit the contributions following the instructions for the regular submissions using the "Submit a Paper" button and selecting the track/workshop preference as "POSTER : Poster Forum". Contributors are invited to submit up to four-page papers, following the conference deadlines, describing early research and novel skeleton ideas in the areas of the conference topics.
Technical marketing/business/positioning presentations
The conference initiates a series of business, technical marketing, and positioning presentations on the same topics. Speakers must submit a 10-12 slide deck presentations with substantial notes accompanying the slides, in the .ppt format (.pdf-ed). The slide deck will be published in the conference’s CD collection, together with the regular papers. Please send your presentations to petre@iaria.org.
Tutorials
Tutorials provide overviews of current high interest topics. They should be about three hours long. One page with the title, tutorial summary, and a short bio are expected. Please send your proposals to petre@iaria.org
Panel proposals
The organizers encourage scientists and industry leaders to organize dedicated panels dealing with controversial and challenging topics and paradigms. Panel moderators are asked to identify their guests and manage that their appropriate talk supports timely reach our deadlines. Moderators must specifically submit an official proposal, indicating their background, panelist names, their affiliation, the topic of the panel, as well as short biographies.
For more information, petre@iaria.org
Workshop proposals
We welcome workshop proposals on issues complementary to the topics of this conference. Your requests should be forwarded to petre@iaria.org.
This CfP was obtained from WikiCFP
Acronym | SENSORCOMM 2009 + |
Camera ready due | March 20, 2009 + |
End date | June 19, 2009 + |
Event type | Conference + |
Has coordinates | 37° 58' 32", 23° 44' 5"Latitude: 37.975563888889 Longitude: 23.734833333333 + |
Has location city | Athens + |
Has location country | Category:Greece + |
Homepage | http://www.iaria.org/conferences2009/SENSORCOMM09.html + |
IsA | Event + |
Notification | February 25, 2009 + |
Start date | June 14, 2009 + |
Subevent of | NetWare 2009 + |
Submission deadline | January 20, 2009 + |
Title | The Third International Conference on Sensor Technologies and Applications + |