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ICNC COG 2015 : ICNC 2015 COG -Cognitive Computing and Networking Symposium | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.conf-icnc.org/2015/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Call for papers ------------------ Cognitive Computing and Networking Symposium (COG) International Conference on Computing, Networking and Communications (ICNC'2015) Anaheim, California, USA, February 16-19, 2015 http://www.conf-icnc.org/2015 Submission deadline: July 27, 2014 (Extended deadline) Paper Acceptance: Sept. 20, 2014 Camera-ready paper: Oct. 20, 2014 Scope --------- Cognitive computing and networking are among the fast emerging areas is modern computer communications. Dynamic spectrum access, cognitive radio, and cognitive networking are among the areas of focus under cognitive computing and networking. Fast growing wireless network traffic will soon result in an increased spectrum scarcity in certain popular bands of the wireless spectrum. On the other hand, large fractions of spectral bands are underutilized or tied under high regulations resulting in very low usage. Emerging solutions in cognitive radios and dynamic spectrum access work towards effective spectrum sharing between primary and secondary users. Measuring, sharing, billing, and opportunistically utilizing available spectrum are critical needs of future cognitive radios. Commercial cognitive radios are still a few years away. Meanwhile, applying cognition across the entire protocol stack is taking the cognitive networking in an alternate, yet important, direction. Models of protocol stacks that employ graphical models have been under active research. The current state of technology reveals the infancy of cognitive networking as evidenced by the recent prototype test beds. Policy decisions, standardization processes, industry agreements are important in realizing effective solutions for cognitive computing and networking. Therefore, cognitive communications and networking is one of the key areas of research activity in communication networking in the future decade. In addition to the civilian communications, tactical communications find cognitive radios useful for operation in net-centric warfare with an additional benefit, detection evasion in hostile environments. ICNC’15 also invites research articles on the area of tactical cognitive communications and networking. ICNC’15 Cognitive Computing and Networking Symposium calls for papers in the topics including, but not limited to, the following: Dynamic spectrum management Dynamic spectrum access strategies Network Architectures for Cognitive Radios and Cognitive Networking Higher layer protocols and solutions for cognitive networks Modeling and performance analysis of spectrum access in very crowded environments Spectrum sharing techniques Cross layer frame work for cognitive networks Cognitive computing for dynamic spectrum access Next generation cognitive networks Observations from Testbeds and implementations Graphical models for cognitive networking Cognitive Network Protocol stack Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks Architecture and platform for Cognitive radio networks Pricing models in dynamic spectrum access Spectrum sensing mechanisms and network protocol support Regulations and policy strategies in developing regions Standardization activities in cognitive communications Spectrum measurement methods Models for Spectrum measurement Efficient and broadband spectrum sensing approaches New applications of Dynamic Spectrum Access Cloud-centric spectrum analysis approaches Cloud-centric Base Stations and Access Points Interference metrics, measurements, and performance analysis Light weight cognitive Access Points Prototypes for Cognitive Network devices Opportunistic Pricing, billing, and payment mechanism for dynamic spectrum access Dynamic Spectrum access etiquettes and coexistence models Radio resource management in cognitive networks Market trends for secondary spectrum usage in developed and developing regions Coordination between Industries and government agencies for quick development of market for DSA equipments New spectrum measurement, sharing, and opportunistic usage models Developing and developed regions and their regulatory models for spectrum access Industry participation, standardization, software regulation, and equipment certification activities Medium Access Control Protocols for Cognitive Radio Networks and Cognitive Networks Routing Protocols for Cognitive Radio Networks and Cognitive Networks Transport Protocols for Cognitive Radio Networks and Cognitive Networks TCP adaptations for Cognitive Radio Networks and Cognitive Networks Cross-layer optimization for cognitive radio networks and Cognitive Networks Information-theoretic aspects of cognitive radio networks and Cognitive Networks QoS provisioning in Cognitive radio networks and Cognitive Networks Privacy, Trust and security issues in Cognitive radio networks and Cognitive Networks Large scale cognitive radio network experimental prototypes and results Storage techniques for spectrum measurements Muilti-channel Spectrum and traffic sampling techniques Spatio-temporal models for dynamic spectrum access Open source cognitive radios Submission Guidelines ---------------------------------- Please follow the author instructions at http://www.conf-icnc.org/2015/author.htm Direct paper submission weblink of this symposium can be found at http://www.conf-icnc.org/2015/cfp.htm Further, we are glad to inform you that ICNC 2015 has already listed about 40 top class IEEE/ACM fellows as invited speakers. You may take a look at the speakers here: Dharma Agrawal (ACM/IEEE/AAAS/WIF Fellow), University of Cincinnati, USA Ender Ayanoglu (IEEE Fellow), University of California, Irvine, USA Victor Bahl (ACM/IEEE/AAAS Fellow), Microsoft, USA Tracy Camp (ACM Fellow), Colorado School of Mines, USA Ramesh Govindan (ACM/IEEE Fellow), University of Southern California, USA Zhu Han (IEEE Fellow), University of Houston, USA Russell Hsing (IEEE/BCS Fellow), National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan Ramesh Jain (ACM/IEEE/IAPR/AAAI/SPIE Fellow), University of California, Irvine, USA Michael I. Jordan (NAS member, NAE member, AAAS member, ACM/IEEE/AAAS/AAAI/ASA/CSS/ IMS/ISBA/SIAM Fellow), UC Berkeley, USA Ahmed E. Kamal (IEEE Fellow), Iowa State University, USA Aggelos K. Katsaggelos (IEEE/SPIE Fellow), Northwestern University, USA Edward Knightly (IEEE Fellow), Rice University, USA B.V.K. Vijaya Kumar (IEEE/SPIE/OSA/IAPR Fellow), Carnegie Mellon University, USA Monica Lam (ACM Fellow), Stanford University, USA Vincent Lau (IEEE/HKIE Fellow), HKUST, China Geert Leus (IEEE Fellow), Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Urbashi Mitra (IEEE Fellow), University of Southern California, USA Katia Obraczka (IEEE Fellow), University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Larry Peterson (NAE member, ACM/IEEE Fellow), Princeton University, USA Chunming Qiao (IEEE Fellow), SUNY Buffalo, USA George Rouskas (IEEE Fellow), North Carolina State University, USA Sumit Roy (IEEE Fellow), University of Washington, USA Abdulmotaleb El Saddik (IEEE/CAE/EIC Fellow), University of Ottawa, Canada Amir Said (IEEE Fellow), LG Electronics, USA Anna Scaglione (IEEE Fellow), University of California, Davis, USA Mihaela van der Schaar (IEEE Fellow), University of California, Los Angeles, USA Ness B. Shroff (IEEE Fellow), The Ohio State University, USA John R. Smith (IEEE Fellow), IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, USA Ioannis Stavrakakis (IEEE Fellow), University of Athen, Greece Danny H. K. Tsang (IEEE/HKIE Fellow), HKUST, China Venugopal V. Veeravalli (IEEE Fellow), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Li-Chun Wang (IEEE Fellow), National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan Yuanyuan Yang (IEEE Fellow), Stony Brook University, USA Regards, ICNC 2015 COG Symposium Co-Chairs R. Chandramouli, Stevens Institute of Technology, NJ, USA B. S. Manoj, IIST Trivandrum, India |
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