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MobiSensor 2011 : 2nd International Workshop on Mobility in Wireless Sensor Networks | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www2.aegean.gr/dgavalas/MobiSensor2011/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
2nd International Workshop on Mobility in Wireless Sensor Networks (MobiSensor’2011), June 29, Barcelona, Spain
http://www2.aegean.gr/dgavalas/MobiSensor2011/ In conjunction with the 7th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing in Sensor Systems (DCOSS'2011) Important Dates: - Paper Submissions: April 15, 2011 - Notification: May 5, 2011 - Final Version: May 23, 2011 Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) offer unprecedented capabilities for integrating sensing with computing and communication as well as for distributed sensing, coordination and control. While WSNs have been a subject of intensive research for about a decade, most research activities to date focused on sensor nodes typically deployed in static, pre-determined locations with sensor readings taken at regular intervals and multi-hopped to a static sink for subsequent storage and analysis. The next evolutionary step for sensor networks is to handle mobility in all its forms. That is, mobility of sinks, mobility of sensors and actuators as well as mobility of code (i.e. applications). The mobility extension represents a more recent research subject in sensor networking; mobility opens up a whole new level of research opportunities and challenges in WSNs, and significantly expands the types of applications for which WSNs can be used. This workshop aims to identifying the benefits and challenges from such a step and outline the state of the art in this particularly promising research area. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): - Sink mobility in Wireless Sensor Networks - Actuator networks - Mobile sensor-actuator networks - Code mobility in Wireless Sensor Networks - Mobile agent-based data aggregation in Wireless Sensor Networks - Localization techniques in wireless sensor and actuator networks - Mobility issues in underwater Wireless Sensor Networks - Mobility-assisted communication in Wireless Sensor Networks - Mobility management in Wireless Sensor Networks - Connectivity maintenance in Wireless Sensor Networks with mobile elements - Mobility for maximizing network lifetime in Wireless Sensor Networks - Mobility models for sinks and actuators in Wireless Sensor Networks - Routing protocols for handling mobility - Distributed algorithms and reasoning in Wireless Sensor Networks with mobile elements - Data fusion techniques in Wireless Sensor Networks with mobile elements - Mobile GeoSensor Networks - Simulation of Wireless Sensor Networks with mobile elements - Applications and deployment experiences Program Co-Chairs: - Damianos Gavalas (dgavalas@aegean.gr), University of the Aegean, Greece - Grammati Pantziou (pantziou@teiath.gr), Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Greece - Charalampos Konstantopoulos (konstant@unipi.gr), University of Piraeus, Greece Paper submission instructions: This workshop will only accept for review original papers that have not been previously published and are not currently under review elsewhere. Papers should be formatted based on the IEEE Transactions journals and conferences style; maximum allowed camera-ready paper length is six (6) pages. Submissions must be in Adobe PDF format, including text, figures and references and sent through email to the Program Co-Chairs (see above). All accepted papers must be presented by a registered author. Proceedings – Journal Special Issue: Besides a hardcopy workshop proceedings volume, workshop papers will be included in the IEEE Digital Library. MobiSensor'2011 chairs are considering several options for organizing a Special Issue in an internationaly reputed journal, where extended versions of selected workshop papers will be invited. Technical Program Committee: - Kemal Akkaya, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, USA - Giuseppe Anastasi, University of Pisa, Italy - Stefano Basagni, Northeastern University, USA - Paolo Bellavista, University of Bologna, Italy - Ioannis Chatzigiannakis, CTI, Greece - Cheng Fu Chou, National Taiwan University, Taiwan - Martin Haenggi, University of Notre Dame, USA - Dimitrios Hatzinakos, University of Toronto, Canada - Chi-Fu Huang, National Chiao-Tung University, Taiwan - Victor Leung, University of British Columbia, Canada - Jun Luo, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore - Tommaso Melodia, State University of New York at Buffalo, USA - Sotiris Nikoletseas, University of Patras, Greece - Chiara Petrioli, University of Rome "La Sapienza", Italy - Hairong Qi, University of Tennessee, USA - Anthony Stefanidis, George Mason University, USA - Natalija Vlajic, York University, Canada - Pramod K. Varshney, Syracuse University, USA - Mohamed Younis, UMBC, USA |
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