MOBIHOC 2011 CONFERENCE Program, Summaries of Wireless Networking

of Texas at Austin). 11h30-12h00 Neighbor Discovery in Wireless Networks with Multipacket Re- ception Wei Zeng (University of Connecticut), ...

Typology: Summaries

2022/2023

Uploaded on 05/11/2023

tylar
tylar 🇺🇸

4.8

(19)

238 documents

1 / 10

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
MOBIHOC 2011 CONFERENCE
Program
With%the%generous%support%of%
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa

Partial preview of the text

Download MOBIHOC 2011 CONFERENCE Program and more Summaries Wireless Networking in PDF only on Docsity!

MOBIHOC 2011 CONFERENCE Program With

the

generous

support of

  • Program of MobiHoc Conference
    • Paris May 17-19

Tuesday May 17

08h30-09h00 Welcome and addresses

  • Opening Addresses: Isabelle Ryl (Director INRIA Paris-Rocquencourt),
  • Philippe Jacquet, General Chair.

09h00-10h00 Plenary talk

Session chair: Devavrat Shah (MIT). Sense and Sensibility for Mobile Networks by Prof. Hari Balakrishnan, MIT Abstract: ”Truly mobile” devices such as smartphones and pads/tablets are rapidly becoming the dominant mode of Internet access. People use these devices in a wide range of locations and movement conditions, often in quick succession. The richness and diversity of operating conditions poses a significant challenge for wireless network protocols, which must adapt to the conditions at hand. In this talk, I will discuss how wireless network protocols can become smarter and operate more sensibly by incorporating external sensory informa- tion. The talk will make the case for a sensor-augmented protocol architecture for mobile networks, giving specific examples and outlining several open prob- lems. This talk is largely based on joint work with Lenin Ravindranath, Sam Mad- den, and Calvin Newport.

10h00-10h30 Coffee break

10h30-12h00 Session: Routing

Session Chair: Dr. Thrasyvoulos Spyropoulos (Eurecom, France)

10h30-11h00 Deterministic Greedy Routing with Guaranteed Delivery in 3D Wireless Sensor Networks Su Xia (University of Louisiana at Lafayette), Xiaotian Yin (Stony Brook University), Hongyi Wu (University of Louisiana at Lafayette), Miao Jin (University of Louisiana at Lafayette), David Gu (Stony Brook University)

11h00-11h30 Optimized Overlay-based Opportunistic Routing Mi Kyung Han (University of Texas at Austin), Apurv Bhartia (University of Texas at Austin), Lili Qiu (University of Texas at Austin), Eric Rozner (University of Texas at Austin)

11h30-12h00 Neighbor Discovery in Wireless Networks with Multipacket Re- ception Wei Zeng (University of Connecticut), Xian Chen (University of Connecticut), Alexander Russell (University of Connecticut), Sudarshan Vasudevan (Bell Labs), Bing Wang (University of Connecticut), Wei Wei (University of Massachusetts)

12h00-13h30 Lunch

13h30-15h30 Session Applications

Session Chair: Hari Balakrishnan (MIT)

13h30-14h00 Broadcasting Delay-Constrained Traffic over Unreliable Wireless Links with Network Coding I-Hong Hou (CSL and Dept. of CS, University of Illinois), P.R. Kumar (CSL and Dept. of ECE, University of Illinois)

14h00-14h30 OmniVoice: A Mobile Voice Solution for Small-scale Enterprises Nabeel Ahmed (MIT), Srinivasan Keshav (University of Waterloo), Kon- stantina Papagiannaki (Intel Research Pittsburgh)

14h30-15h00 Enabling Coexistence of Heterogeneous Wireless Systems: Case for ZigBee and WiFi Xinyu Zhang (University of Michigan), Kang G. Shin (University of Michigan)

15h00-15h30 The Hare and the Tortoise: Taming Wireless Losses by Exploit- ing Wired Reliability Anirudh Badam (Princeton University), Dongsu Han (Carnegie Mellon University), David G. Andersen (Carnegie Mellon University), Michael Kaminsky (Intel Labs Pittsburgh), Konstantina Pa- pagiannaki (Intel Labs Pittsburgh), Srinivasan Seshan (Carnegie Mellon University)

15h30-16h00 Coffee break

16h00-17h30 Session Cognitive Radios and Spectrum Ac-

cess

Session chair: Dina Papagianakis (Intel Labs, USA)

16h00-16h30 A Market-Clearing Model for Spectrum Trade in Cognitive Ra- dio Networks Sang-Seon Byun (Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Ilangko Balasingham (Rikshospitalet University Hospital), Athanasios Vasilakos (University of Western Macedonia)

16h30-17h00 Truthful Auction for Cooperative Communications Dejun Yang (Arizona State University), Xi Fang (Arizona State University), Guoliang Xue (Arizona State University)

17h00-17h30 Non-cooperative Spectrum Access - The Dedicated vs. Free Spectrum Choice Krishna Jagannathan (MIT), Ishai Menache (MIT), Eytan Modiano (MIT), Gil Zussman (Columbia University)

12h30-14h00 Lunch

14h00-15h00 Session Reliability and Security

Session Chair: Xiaomeng Ban (Stony Brook University)

14h00-14h30 Self-Stabilizing Leader Election for Single-Hop Wireless Net- works Despite Jamming Andrea Richa (ASU), Christian Scheideler (Uni Paderborn), Stefan Schmid (T-Labs / TU Berlin), Jin Zhang (ASU)

14h30-15h00 Towards Cheat-Proof Cooperative Relay for Cognitive Radio Networks Haifan Yao (SUNY at Buffalo), Sheng Zhong (SUNY at Buf- falo)

15h00-15h30 Coffee break

15h30-16h30 Poster session

Session Chair: C´edric Adjih (INRIA, France)

  • W3-Privacy: the Three Dimensions of User Privacy in LBS, Pablo A. Prez-Martnez, Agusti Solanas (Universitat Rovira i Virgili Tar- ragona, Catalonia, Spain)
  • On the impact of routers mobility on substitution networks, Karen Miranda, Enrico Natalizio and Tahiry Razafindralambo (INRIA Lille - Nord Europe)
  • A Statistical Region-based Compressive Sensing Indoor, Dimitris Milioris (INRIA Rocquencourt - Paris)
  • Local Capacity in Wireless Networks: What Can We Expect Beyond Slotted ALOHA, Philippe Jacquet and Salman Malik (INRIA Rocquencourt - Paris)
  • Impact of 802.11n Link Layer Parameters on Application Per- formance, Lito Kriara, Mujahid Al-Adhami and Mahesh K. Marina (The University of Edinburgh, UK)
  • Emulation of large scale wireless sensor networks: from real neighbors to imaginary destination, Jovan Radak (INRIA Lille - Nord Europe), Bogdan Pavkovic, Franck Rousseau (University of Greno- ble, France), Ivan Stojmenovic (University of Novi Sad, Serbia)
  • TABA: A Channel Selection Algorithm for Heterogeneous Wire- less Sensor Networks, Yasir Faheem and Saadi Boudjit (Universit Paris 13, France)

16h30-17h30 Session Mobility and DTNs

Session chair: Christian Scheideler (Uni Paderborn, Germany)

16h30-17h00 Dispatch-and-Search: Dynamic Multi-Ferry Control in Parti- tioned Mobile Networks Ting He (IBM Research), Ananthram Swami (US Army Research Lab), Kang-Won Lee (IBM Research)

17h00-17h30 Putting Contacts into Context: Mobility Modeling beyond Inter- Contact Times Theus Hossmann (ETH Zurich), Thrasyvoulos Spyropou- los (Eurecom), Franck Legendre (ETH Zurich)

20h00-23h00 Social Event: Dinner cruise Bleu Seine

Sponsor section

Sagem, a high-tech company in the Safran group, holds world or European lead- ership positions in optronics, avionics, navigation, electronics and safety-critical software for both civil and military markets. Sagem is the No. 1 company in Europe and No. 3 worldwide for inertial navigation systems (INS) used in air, land and naval applications. It is also the world leader in helicopter flight controls and the European leader in optronics and tactical UAV systems. Op- erating across the globe through the Safran group, Sagem and its subsidiaries employ 7,000 people in Europe, Southeast Asia and North America. Sagem is involved in several programs of digitization and transformations of the armed forces, developping and producing C2 systems such as Battle man- agement systems, artillery C2 systems, optronics systems for forward observers and recce units, for France and international customers. Sagem is main contrac- tor of the FELIN program, the integrated dismounted soldier system, including tactical radio, C2 systems and optronic sensors, for the French army. A total of 22 600 systems is being currently in production. The first bataillon has been delivered in september 2010. Sagem is the main contractor of Phoenix demon- stration and experimentation program for the French Army based on software, C4I tactical systems, sensors and integration of electronics and optronics in combat vehicles. Sagem systems are proven on several overseas operations. Sagem is the commercial name of the company Sagem Dfense Scurit. For more information: www.sagem-ds.com