GIIS 2009

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-UBIROADS'09

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Keynotes talks

NANO-SENSOR NETWORKS USING MOLECULAR COMMUNICATION - TUESDAY - JUNE 23

IAN F. AKYILDIZ
Broadband Wireless Networking Lab
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA 30332, USA

http://www.ece.gatech.edu/research/labs/bwn

Abstract
Nano-Sensor Networks. i.e., the interconnection of nano-sensors are expected to expand the capabilities of single nano-sensors by allowing them to cooperate and share information. Traditional communication technologies are not suitable for nano-sensor networks mainly due to the size and power consumption of transceivers, receivers and other components. The use of molecules, instead of electromagnetic or acoustic waves, to encode and transmit the information represents a new communication paradigm that demands novel solutions such as molecular transceivers, channel models or protocols for nanonetworks.

In this talk, first the state-of-the-art in nano-sensors, including architectural aspects, expected features of future nano-sensors, and current developments are presented for a better understanding of nano-sensor network scenarios. Moreover, nano-sensor network features and components are explained and compared with traditional communication networks. Furthermore, nano-sensor networks for short-range communication based on calcium signaling and molecular motors as well as for long-range communication based on pheromones are presented. Finally, open research challenges, such as the development of network components, molecular communication theory, and the development of new architectures and protocols, are presented which need to be developed in order to pave the way for the development and deployment of nano-sensor networks within the next couple of decades.

About the Speaker:
IAN F. AKYILDIZ received his BS, MS, and PhD degrees in Computer
Engineering from the University of Erlangen-Nuernberg, Germany, in 1978, 1981 and 1984, respectively. Currently, he is the Ken Byers Distinguished Chair Professor with the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Director of Broadband Wireless Networking Laboratory. and Chair of the Telecommunication Group at Georgia Tech.
Dr. Akyildiz is also an Honorary Professor with School of Electrical
Engineering at the Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain since June 2008. He is the Editor-in-Chief of Computer Networks (Elsevier) Journal, the founding Editor-in-Chief of the Ad Hoc Networks Journal (Elsevier) in 2003 and the founding Editor-in-Chief of the Physical Communication (PHYCOM) Journal (Elsevier) in 2008. Dr. Akyildiz serves on the advisory boards of several research centers, journals, conferences and publication companies..
Dr. Akyildiz is an IEEE FELLOW (1996) and an ACM FELLOW (1997).
He received numerous awards from IEEE and ACM.
His current research interests are in Nanonetworks, Wireless Sensor Networks, Wireless Mesh Networks, Cognitive Radio Networks.

From Rural Village to Global Village:
Strategies for Bridging Digital Divides in the Developing World
WEDNESDAY - JUNE 24

Presented by : Professor Heather E. Hudson
Professor and Director, Communications Technology Management Program, University of San Francisco, USA

Abstract
This talk will present an overview of availability of telecommunications, including voice and Internet access, in developing regions of Africa, the Asia-Pacific, and Latin America and the Caribbean. It will then examine strategies for bridging digital divides, including recent experience with universal service funds and user-based subsidies. It will propose roles for IEEE and affiliated organizations in ICT pilot projects and capacity building in the developing world.

About the speaker
Dr. Heather E. Hudson Professor of Communication Technology Management and Policy in the School of Business and Management at the University of San Francisco. She received an Honours BA from the University of British Columbia, MA and PhD from Stanford University, and JD from the University of Texas at Austin. Her research focuses on applications of ICTs for socio-economic development and policies to extend affordable access to new technologies and services in rural and developing regions. Dr. Hudson has planned or evaluated communication projects in northern Canada, Alaska, and more than 50 developing countries and emerging economies in Africa, Asia, the South Pacific, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Latin America. She has also consulted for the private sector, government agencies, consumer and indigenous associations, and international organizations. She is has been a Fulbright Distinguished Lecturer for the Asia/Pacific and Sloan Industry Fellow at Columbia University, and has also been an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Hong Kong, and Senior Fellow at CIRCIT in Australia and at the East-West Center in Hawaii. She has recently been awarded a Fulbright Canada-US Policy Research Chair for fall 2009.

Professor Hudson is the author of numerous articles and several books including From Rural Village to Global Village: Telecommunications for Developing in the Information Age; Global Connections: International Telecommunications Infrastructure and Policy; Communication Satellites: Their Development and Impact; and When Telephones Reach the Village, and co-author of Electronic Byways and Rural America in the Information Age.

Enabling Ubiquitous Mobile Services THURSDAY - JUNE 25

Hossam Hassanein
Telecommunications Research Lab
Queen’s University
Kingston, Canada

Abstract
Internet users are increasingly using interactive services such as multimedia messaging, social networks (e.g., facebook, myspace), sharing (e.g., torrents) and collaborative applications (e.g., wiki pages). Emerging services (e.g. telemedicine or telepresence) are also gaining popularity. Simultaneously, Internet users are becoming more and more mobile, and are growingly interested in maintaining full access to their services mix while on the go. Together, these developments are straining current architectures for service delivery in wireless and mobile networks, which were not designed to handle large and highly variable information transfer, accommodate dynamic mobility and employ isolated service management platform. They are also mostly static and impersonal in their management as they do not adapt to individual user requirements, habits or surroundings.

In this talk I address the topic of ubiquitous mobile services from three complementary directions. The first considers techniques for establishing means to seamlessly combine different wireless access technologies and structures, in addition to different service deployment and management platforms. The second describes design and operation guidelines of robust and opportunistic networks that can handle the highly dynamic requirements of future services and their QoS while exploiting variations in network and medium conditions. The third addresses support for collaborative and peer-to-peer applications in next generation wireless environments.


About the Speaker:
Hossam Hassanein is an internationally recognized researcher in the School of Computing at Queen's University in the areas of broadband, wireless and variable topology networks architecture, protocols, control and performance evaluation. Dr. Hassanein obtained his Ph.D. in Computing Science from the University of Alberta in 1990. He is the founder and director of the Telecommunication Research (TR) Lab http://www.cs.queensu.ca/~trl in the School of Computing at Queen’s. Dr. Hassanein has more than 350 publications in reputable journals, conferences and workshops in the areas of computer networks and performance evaluation. He has delivered several invited talks and tutorials at key international venues, including Unconventional Computing 2007, IEEE ICC 2008, IEEE WLN 2008, IEEE CCNC 2009 and IEEE GCC 2009. Dr. Hassanein has organized and served on the program committee of numerous international conferences and workshops. He also serves on the editorial board of a number of International Journals. He is a senior member of the IEEE and is currently vice-chair of the IEEE Communication Society Technical Committee on Ad hoc and Sensor Networks (TC AHSN). Dr. Hassanein is the recipient of Communications and Information Technology Ontario (CITO) Champions of Innovation Research award in 2003. In 2007, he received best paper awards at the IEEE Wireless Communications and Networks and the IEEE Global Communication Conferences (both flagship IEEE communications society conferences). Dr. Hassanein is an IEEE Communications Society Distinguished Lecturer.