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SenseApp 2011 : SIXTH IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON PRACTICAL ISSUES IN BUILDING SENSOR NETWORK APPLICATIONS | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~senseapp | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
SENSEAPP 2011
SIXTH IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON PRACTICAL ISSUES IN BUILDING SENSOR NETWORK APPLICATIONS (in conjunction with IEEE LCN 2011) Bonn, Germany 4 - 7 October 2011 Web: http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~senseapp CALL FOR PAPERS Sensor nodes are tiny autonomous devices that combine sensing, computing and wireless communication capabilities. These nodes are deeply embedded into the physical surroundings, and gather and process information such as temperature, humidity, light characteristics, seismic activities or images and sound samples from the physical world. Networked systems of such sensors are expected to be used in a variety of applications including habitat monitoring, precision agriculture, disaster recovery operations, healthcare and supply chain management. Real-world sensor network deployments and prototypic implementations are still not commonplace. However, experiences gained in such deployments are crucial for the sensor network research community. These results are needed to refine assumptions made when designing hardware, software, protocols and mechanisms for sensor networks. This workshop aims at bringing together researchers from academia and industry to showcase their work and obtain feedback. We expect the workshop to act as a forum for the sensor network research community to discuss open issues, novel solutions and the future development of wireless sensor networks in general. We encourage contributions describing innovative work in the realm of wireless sensor networks. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Experiences from real-world sensor network deployment and applications Innovative sensor network applications Participatory sensing Middleware support for sensor networks Programming and debugging sensor networks Security, availability and dependability issues in sensor networks Experiences with new sensor hardware Practical problems in implementing localization and time synchronization Experiences with communication protocols Practical medium access control protocols (MACs) Topology control and routing protocols in existing sensor network deployments Fault-tolerance and troubleshooting sensor networks Antenna design and experiences with signal propagation Experiences regarding energy management and network lifetime Configuration and installation support Management of large-scale sensor networks Interconnection between IP and sensor networks Submitted papers will be reviewed by three independent experts in the field. Proceedings of the workshop will be published together with those of IEEE LCN, and will be available in digital format from the IEEE Explore Digital Library. SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS: Authors are invited to submit original unpublished work, not currently under review by another conference, workshop or journal. Full papers should be restricted to 8 camera-ready pages (in 10 pt font, double column, US letter size, 8.5 x 11 inches, IEEE format), including text, figures and references. Authors should use only standard fonts, i.e. Times Roman, Courier, Symbol, Helvetica or equivalent. Papers must be submitted electronically via EDAS. All papers must include title, complete contact information of all authors, abstract and up to 5 keywords on the cover page. The corresponding author must be clearly identified. Further information can be found at http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~senseapp. IMPORTANT DATES: Paper Submission Deadline: 12 May 2011 Notification of Acceptance: 4 July 2011 Camera Ready Copy Due: 28 July 2011 PROGRAM COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRS: Salil Kanhere, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia Matthias Hollick, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany STEERING COMMITTEE: Sanjay Jha, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia Cormac Sreenan, University College, Cork, UK TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE: Nael Abu-Ghazaleh, SUNY Binghamton, USA James Brown, Lancaster University, UK Athanassios Boulis, National ICT Australia Rachel Cardell-Oliver, University of Western Australia, Australia Alberto Cerpa, University of California Merced, USA Bor-rong Chen, Harvard University, USA Delphine Christin, Technische Universität Darmstadt Stefan Dulman, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Simon Duquennoy, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden Oscar Garcia Morchon, Philips Research Europe, Netherlands Omprakash Gnawali, Stanford University, USA Wendi Heinzelman, University of Rochester, USA Wen Hu, CSIRO, Australia Vana Kalogeraki, Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece Vinay Kolar, Carnegie Mellon University, Qatar Branislav Kusy, CSIRO, Australia Hock Beng Lim, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Luca Mottola, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden Edith Ngai, Uppsala University, Sweden Brendan O'Flynn, Tyndall National Institute, Ireland Neal Patwari, University of Utah, USA Michael Rabbat, McGill University, Canada Andreas Reinhardt, Technische Universität Darmstadt Kay Roemer, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Silvia Santini, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Sameer Tilak, University of California at San Diego, USA Klaus Wehrle, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Kui Wu, University of Victoria, Canada Michael Zink, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA |
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