[Our apologies if you receive multiple copies of this
CFP]

 

COGSENS 2010: Workshop on Cognitive Wireless Sensing
Systems for Factory and Logistics Automation held in conjunction with the 6th
IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Sensors, Sensor Networks and
Information Processing (ISSNIP 2010)
December 7-10, Brisbane, Australia http://www.issnip.org/2010/symposia.html#Auto

 

Cognitive, embedded wireless systems have the potential
to revolutionize the way factory and logistics automation is carried out by
increasing productivity, flexibility and safety while reducing costs. Such
systems may be deployed in a variety of environments such as within the
building infrastructure, in tools and machinery and embedded in garments or
clothing of personnel. This would enable continuous fine-grained monitoring of
various processes and operations in typically harsh environments. In addition,
the in-built intelligence could allow certain nodes to individually or
collaboratively analyse the sensed data and take autonomous decisions to
perform certain actuation operations. Cognitive systems could also play an
important role in providing real-time feedback to factory or logistics
personnel to help improve productivity and safety.

 

There are, however, numerous challenges in developing
such systems. For example, the harsh radio environment present within factories
and warehouses makes it essential to develop robust networking protocols that
are highly fault tolerant. The limited memory and computational resources on
every node means that collaborative algorithms are required to process the
sensed data. Certain nodes in the network may be powered using harvested energy
(e.g. solar, vibration, etc.). This would require energy management algorithms
that would help the system deal with variable levels of energy resources over
time. The networking and data processing algorithms need to be highly scalable
and support heterogeneous network architectures as a typical large scale
network may involve thousands of nodes with differing capabilities in terms of
sensing, data generation, processing power and network capability.

 

This workshop provides a platform for both academic and
industrial researchers to demonstrate how cognitive wireless sensing
technologies can enhance the operation of present day factory and logistics
operations. The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

 

- Robust networking protocols (MAC, Routing, Transport,
Time synchronization, QoS, Mobility support).

- Sensor information processing (Calibration, Adaptive
sampling, Signal processing).

- Distributed algorithms for data management (Querying,
Data aggregation, Coding, Storage).

- Theoretical and simulation-based modelling (Mobility
models, Fundamental bounds and formulations).

- Energy harvesting (Variable energy management
algorithms).

- In-network data interpretation (Event detection and
classification, Situation and context awareness, On-line training and learning,
Activity recognition).

- Sensor-actuator coordination (Heterogeneous
architectures, Distributed control, Adaptive feedback mechanisms).

- System support (Operating systems, Network monitoring
and management, Network reprogramming, Simulation and debugging tools).

- Services (Service discovery, Localization and
tracking).

- Real-world experiences (Novel applications,
Deployments, Experimental testbeds, Measurements).

 

Important Dates :

- Title and Abstract Submission: 15 August 2010

- Paper Submission: 31 August 2010

- Notification of Acceptance: 30 September 2010

- Final Paper Submission: 7 October 2010

- Conference Dates: 7-10 December 2010

 

Prospective authors are invited to submit full papers, of
original material (up to 6 pages in length) electronically. All accepted papers
will be published by the IEEE Press and appear in the Conference Proceedings
and on IEEE Xplore.  See the website for
author guidelines. All submitted papers will be subjected to multiple
independent peer reviews.  

 

Co-chair: 

- Paul Havinga, University of Twente, The Netherlands
Organising committee:

- Supriyo Chatterjea, University of Twente, The
Netherlands

- Raluca Marin-Perianu, University of Twente, The Netherlands

- Ozlem Durmaz Incel, Özlem Durmaz Incel, Bogaziçi
University, Turkey

                                          
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