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SENSEAPP 2009
FOURTH IEEE INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON PRACTICAL ISSUES IN BUILDING
SENSOR NETWORK APPLICATIONS
(in conjunction with IEEE LCN 2009)
Zurich, Switzerland
20 October 2009
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~senseapp
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
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.
Technical Program
Session 1: Keynote Address
Experiences from three years of developing and operating the
PermaSense wireless sensor network for harsh mountain environments,
Stefan Gruber, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Session 2: Applications and Hardware
* Camera traps as sensor networks for monitoring animal communities,
Roland Kays (New York State Museum, USA), Bart Kranstauber (Max Planck
Institute, Germany), Patrick Jansen (Max Planck Institute, Germany),
Chris Carbone (Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London,
UK), Marcus Rowcliffe (Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of
London, UK), Tony Fountain (University of California at San Diego,
USA) and Sameer Tilak (University of California at San Diego, USA)
* A demonstration of wireless sensing for long-term monitoring of
water quality, Fiona Regan (Dublin City University, Ireland), Antoin
Lawlor (Dublin City University, Ireland), Brendan O'Flynn (Tyndall
National Institute, Ireland), Rafael Matinez-Catala (Tyndall National
Institute, Ireland), S. Harte (Tyndall National Institute, Ireland),
C. O'Mathuna (Tyndall National Institute, Ireland) and John Wallace
(Intelligent Data Systems, Ireland)
* On the feasibility of using servo-mechanisms in wireless multimedia
sensor network deployments, Damien O'Rourke (CSIRO, Australia), Raja
Jurdak (CSIRO, Australia), Junbin Liu (Queensland University of
Technology, Australia), Darren Moore, (CSIRO, Australia) and Tim Wark
(CSIRO, Australia)
Session 3: Operating Systems and Security
* A real-time kernel for wireless sensor networks employed in rescue
scenarios, Heiko Will (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany), Kaspar
Schleiser (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany) and Jochen Schiller
(Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
* Tiny15four: A portable, yet efficient 802.15.4 stack, Philippe
Bonnet (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) and Jan Flora (University
of Copenhagen, Denmark)
* Security enhanced multi-hop over the air reprogramming with fountain
codes, Jens-Matthias Bohli (NEC Europe, Germany), Dirk Westhoff (NEC
Europe, Germany), Alban Hessler (NEC Europe, Germany) and Osman Ugus
(NEC Europe, Germany)
* Key agreement with low-end devices, Dirk Westhoff (NEC Europe,
Germany) and Frederik Armknecht (Ruhr-Universitaet, Germany)
Session 4: Experimentation and Evaluations
Controllable radio interference for experimental and testing purposes
in wireless sensor networks, Carlo Alberto Boano (Swedish Institute of
Computer Science, Sweden), Zhitao He (Swedish Institute of Computer
Science, Sweden), Yafei Li (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden),
Thiemo Voigt (Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden), Marco
Zuniga (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland) and Andreas
Willig (Technical University of Berlin, Germany)
On the energy efficiency of lossless data compression in wireless
sensor networks, Andreas Reinhardt (Technische Universität Darmstadt,
Germany), Delphine Christin (Technische Universität Darmstadt,
Germany), Matthias Hollick (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain)
and Ralf Steinmetz, (Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany)
Evaluation of IPv6 over low-Power wireless personal area networks
implementations, Iyad Tumar (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany) and
Juergen Schoenwaelder (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)
_______________________________________________
Salil Kanhere
Senior Lecturer
School of Computer Science and Engineering
The University Of New South Wales
Sydney NSW 2052
Australia
E-mail: salilk@cse.unsw.edu.au
Web: www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~salilk
Tel: +61 2 9385 6927
Fax: +61 2 9385 5995
UNSW CRICOS Provider Code: 00098G
Legal Disclaimer: http://www.eng.unsw.edu.au/emailids.htm
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