Track: Software Technology
Minitrack: Wireless
Sensor Networks and Applications
Research in the field of wireless ad-hoc and sensor networks is
continuing to produce advances, both in fundamental communication among
multiple wireless nodes and in application areas that include wireless
mesh networks, vehicular ad-hoc networks, and the many fields in which
wireless sensor networks are proving useful. Advances in the field
range from purely theoretical, through many intermediate levels, all
the way to determinedly practical. Specific research issues include
(but are not limited to) better routing, MAC, and transport layers,
physical layer(s) and their application to solving specific problems,
application-specific protocols and algorithms, cross-layer protocol
design, mobility, security, scalability, reliability, node
configuration and autoconfiguration, overall cost or energy efficiency,
node location or ways of dealing with position uncertainty, and
specific novel applications of wireless ad-hoc networks and wireless
sensor networks.
The defining property of wireless ad hoc and sensor networks is the use
of wireless nodes to produce, consume, and relay data on a flexible,
as-needed basis appropriate for the intended application. Although some
nodes may be connected to a wider Internet, the focus of wireless ad
hoc network or wireless sensor network research is the communication
among generally equivalent nodes. To support the needed flexibility,
the networks nodes must generally work together and self-regulate
without much central control or direction, and do so automatically and
reliably without substantial human intervention.
This minitrack is focused on the issues that arise in designing useful
wireless sensor and ad-hoc networks. While many such networks so far
have been relatively small scale, it is interesting and useful to study
what happens when network sizes grow to very large sizes, as is
projected for the future. Such growth can be in overall number of
nodes, in network diameter, in network density, or in other metrics.
Please visit
http://cs.chaminade.edu/org/hicss09/ for more information.
Topics and research areas include, but are not limited to:
* Networking issues, including physical, MAC, routing, transport, application, or cross-layer protocols and algorithms
* Novel applications of wireless ad-hoc networks or wireless sensor networks
* Theoretical issues of interest in the design or implementation of
wireless ad-hoc or sensor networks, including communications, energy
consumption, scalability, node location and coordination
* Communications security and node security, network management, data
visualization, and new and better algorithms for performing node
localization or dealing with position uncertainty
* Novel implementations, measurment or modeling of wireless networks, and significant new deployments, hardware, or software
* Any other research topics relating to wireless sensor networks, other
wireless ad-hoc networks, wireless mesh networks, and mixed wireless
ad-hoc and wired networks
Chair:
Edoardo Biagioni
(Primary Contact)
Department of Information and Computer Science
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Honolulu, HI 96822, USA
Email: esb@hawaii.edu