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IEEE Communication Magazine Feature Topic - Network Slicing (CfP)
Network slicing has evolved from a simple network overlay concept to a 
fundamental feature of the emerging 5G systems enabling dynamic multi-service 
support, multi-tenancy and the integration means for vertical market players. 
Network slicing can drastically transform the networking perspective by 
abstracting, isolating and separating logical network behaviors from the 
underlying physical network resources. Network operators, can exploit network 
slicing for reducing capital and operations expenditures, allowing also 
programmability and innovation, necessary to enrich the offered services from 
simple communications services to a wider range of business services. The 
separation of different functions by abstractions (e.g. radio resources from 
packet processing) simplifies the integration challenges especially for 
applications supporting vertical industries beyond telecommunications.
Network slicing in 5G systems may be performed by abstracting different 
physical infrastructures into a logical network that contains shared resources, 
such as radio spectrum or dedicated core network equipment, and virtual network 
functions obtained by breaking down single physical equipment into multiple 
instances, which are isolated from each other. Virtualization of network 
functions allow to decouple network node functions from proprietary hardware 
appliances in order to create distinct building blocks that can be flexibly 
chained to create communication services.
The notion of resources in 5G network slicing includes network, compute and 
storage capacity resources; virtualized network functions; shared physical 
resources; and radio resources. Service designers can select the optimal 
control/user plane split, as well as compose and allocate virtualized network 
functions at particular locations inside the core or radio access network 
depending on the service requirements. The creation and management of network 
slicing is a challenging process that poses new problems in service 
instantiation and orchestration, resource allocation/sharing and assignment 
procedures as well as network virtualization technologies.
Existing open source, industry and standards developments have given shape to 
the initial perception of a 5G network slice, while further research activities 
aim to enhance such new evolving concept by exploring its full potential. The 
so-called 5G network slice fully supports a particular communication service 
exploiting the principles of software-defined networks and network function 
virtualization in order to fulfill the business and regulatory requirements.  
The achieved networking and service flexibility enables a radical change, 
beyond network sharing, enabling different mobile operators to offer tailored 
services and means for network programmability to OTT providers and or vertical 
market players.
Scope of Submissions
Original contributions are invited on the latest advancements on network 
slicing for 5G systems considering architecture, network management, 
orchestration and mechanisms that enable virtualization and multi-tenancy. The 
topics of interest within the scope of this issue include (but are not limited 
to) the following:

  *   Network Slicing architectures and deployment practices
  *   Network slicing and multi-tenancy support in service overlay networks
  *   Network function (de)composition and allocation considering "atomic" 
functions
  *   QoE support management mechanisms in network slices
  *   Multi-service and multi-connectivity network slicing
  *   Next generation of orchestration architectures combining SDN and NFV
  *   Network resource programmability and developments on the Northbound-APIs
  *   Mobile Edge Computing and service optimization
  *   Network slicing and backhaul /fronthaul mechanisms
  *   Network slicing for converged fixed-wireless 5G networks

SUBMISSIONS

Articles should be tutorial in nature and written in a style comprehensible and 
accessible to readers outside the specialty of the article. Complete guidelines 
for prospective authors can be found at 
http://www.comsoc.org/commag/paper-submission-guidelines. The guest editors 
reserve the right to reject papers they unanimously deem to be either out of 
scope of this Feature Topic or otherwise extremely unlikely to be accepted 
after a peer review process.

It is important to note that IEEE Communications Magazine strongly limits 
mathematical content, and the number of figures and tables. Mathematical 
equations should not be used (in justified cases up to three simple equations 
are allowed). Article length (introduction through conclusions, excluding 
figures, tables and their captions) should not exceed 4,500 words. Figures and 
tables should be limited to a combined total of six (6). The number of archival 
references is limited to fifteen (15). Non-archival references (website URLs, 
web-posted papers and reports, unpublished/to be published/pending papers) 
should not be included in the "References" section. All articles must be 
submitted through the IEEE Manuscript Central site 
(http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/commag-ieee) to the "May 2017 / 5G Network 
Slicing" category by the submission deadline according to the following 
schedule:
IMPORTANT DATES

  *   Manuscript Submission Deadline: September 15, 2016
  *   Decision Notification: December 15, 2016
  *   Final Manuscript Due Date: February 15,  2017
  *   Publication Date: May  2017


GUEST EDITORS

Konstantinos Samdanis
NEC Europe, Germany
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Steven Wright
AT&T Services, US
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Albert Banchs
UC3M, Spain
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Antonio Capone
Politecnico di Milano, Italy
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Mehmet Ulema
Manhattan College, US
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Kazuaki Obana
NTT Docomo, Japan
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



best regards
Steven Wright, MBA, PhD, JD.
NFV & SDN Industry Engagement
Standards & Industry Alliances
AT&T Services Inc.
1057 Lenox Park Blvd NE, STE 4D28
Atlanta, GA 30319
P: 404.499.7030

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
@DrStevenAWright (personal)
www.linkedin.com/in/drstevenawright/<http://www.linkedin.com/in/drstevenawright/>

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