Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend International Conference and Business Expo on Wireless Communication & Network Baltimore, USA .

Day :

  • Day 1
Speaker

Chair

Dr. Norman Shaw

Director Product & Business Development IEEE Standards Association

Session Introduction

Elizabeth Chang

The Universality of New South Wales (Australia Defence Force Academy), Australia

Title: Advances in internet of things and cyber physical systems and its application to smart ship

Time : 14:00-14:35

Speaker
Biography:

Elizabeth Chang is a Professor in Logistics and a Canberra Fellow at the University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy. She holds BSc, MSc and PhD in Computer Science and Software Engineering and has been CIO/CTO in Multinational Logistics and Transport Company in Hong Kong. She has delivered 41 keynote/plenary speeches largely at major IEEE Conferences and International Conferences. She has published over 500 refereed papers with an H-Index of 35 (Google Scholar). She is a Fellow of IEEE and the Chair for IEEE IES Technical Committee on Industrial Informatics (2014-2015).

Abstract:

The Internet of Things (IoT) also known as Cloud of Things refers to the inter-connection of uniquely identifiable embedded computing like devices within the existing Internet infrastructure. Example: Smart grid, heart monitoring implants, biochip transponders, automobiles with built-in sensors, or field operation devices. It is a network of functional tightly coupled system, using various technologies such as RFID, Zigbee, Bluetooth or 6LoWPAN. The Web of Things (WoT) is an evolution of the Internet of Things. A concept and plan to fully incorporate every-day physical objects into the World Wide Web, allowing us to build an application layer for physical objects. A Cyber-Physical System (CPS) is a globally connected WoT, bring embedded systems to the Web, i.e., aerospace, automotive, chemical processes, civil infrastructure, renewable energy, remote healthcare monitor, automated manufacturing, intelligent transportation, and consumer appliances. Several successful adaptation including collision avoidance; precision (e.g., robotic surgery and nano-level manufacturing); operation in dangerous or inaccessible environments (e.g., search and rescue, firefighting, and deep-sea exploration); coordination (e.g., air traffic control, war fighting). This talk presents new advances in science and engineering that has made improvement on the link between computational and physical elements, particularly in the area of autonomy, efficiency, functionality, reliability, safety, and usability of IoT and CPS. The talk will give a case study, namely a Smart Ship, moving away from manual operation to automated ship warehouse management.

János Levendovszky

Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Title: Quality-of-service routing protocol for wireless sensor

Time : 14:35-15:10

Speaker
Biography:

János Levendovszky received his MSc and PhD degree from the Budapest University of Tecyhnology and Economics. Presently, he is a Professor and head of the doctoral school at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Informatics of the same university. His present research includes adaptive signal processing, neural networks, communication protocols and financial computations. He has served as a guest professor at several European, US and South Korean Universities.

Abstract:

In this paper, we develop novel algorithms to find the optimal, energy preserving, paths from Source Node (SN) to the Base Station (BS) in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Optimality is defined in a constrained sense, in which the minimal energy route is sought (to maximize the lifespan of WSNs) under reliability constraint, meaning that each packet must reach the BS with a given probability. Energy efficiency is going to be achieved by selecting nodes for multi-hop packet forwarding under information, which yields the most evenly distributed energy state over the network after the packet has reached the BS. There are many efficient protocols which increase the lifetime of sensor network such as LEACH, PEGASIS, and PEDAP. But they failed to provide energy balancing under reliability constraints. Solving this problem, we propose a new algorithm under name High Quality of service Routing Algorithm (HQRA), which is able to find near-optimal paths in WSNs by minimizing the energy but guaranteeing a given level of reliability, as well. New High Quality of Service Routing Algorithm for WSNs, which finds the minimum energy path from the SN to the BS and achieves a predefined level of reliability. The proposed method can run in polynomial complexity, with respect to the number of nodes, by recursively using the Bellman-Ford algorithm. Furthermore, HQRA gave good results with any BS positioning in wireless sensor network. The simulation results will demonstrate that our algorithm is more efficient than the other routing protocols proposed before.

Zaid A Shafeeq

Al-Ahliyya Amman University, Jordan

Title: A Wireless cognitive radio network with a synchronized cooperative relaying

Time : 15:10:15:45

Speaker
Biography:

Zaid A. Shafeeq received his B.E. degree in Communications and Electronics Engineering from Isra University, Jordan in 2010, and his M.E. in Communications Engineering from Al Ahliyya Amman University, Jordan in 2015. His area of interest includes Fifth Generation of Mobile Communications, Long Term Evolution (LTE) technology, and Communications Networks.

Abstract:

This paper attempts to apply cooperative relay in an underlay wireless cognitive radio network, where all of the secondary user nodes draw their power from a primary user within a certain threshold level in order not to interfere with it. The network is divided into pairs, and each pair is assumed to have synchronized exchange-relay ability, i.e. performing data transmission and providing an alternative path to the direct link of the other pair. The simulation results prove that enabling relay technique gives significant enhancements to the system\\\'s performance through decreasing the outage probability. Furthermore, the efficiency has been improved by inviting all the nodes to participate in providing multiple paths to exchange data, which in turn gives a robust cognitive radio network.

Trung-Dinh Han

Samsung Electronics, Vietnam

Title: Device-To-Device (D2D) communication in 5G cellular networks

Time : 16:05-16:40

Speaker
Biography:

Trung-Dinh Han is a Senior Manager/Principal Engineer of Samsung Vietnam Mobile R&D Center, Samsung Electronics. He is managing and developing B2B and Cloud Solutions. He has been developing a hundred commercialized smartphone projects for South Each Asia. For academic experience, he’d served as a Research Professor at University of Ulsan, South Korea since 2011.

Abstract:

According to eMarketer market research, smartphone users will be reached 2 billion in 2016, resulting in a lot of challenges for current cellular networks, such as bandwidth utilization, spectrum crisis and high energy consumption. Although the fourth generation (4G) networks are now becoming great success, it cannot accommodate the challenges. Device-To-Device (D2D) communication may be one of key solutions for the next generation (5G) networks to deal with these issues. D2D communication in cellular networks allows direct communication between two mobile users without assisted from Base Station (BS) or infrastructure based networks. With initial studies, the D2D communication exposes some advantages for improving spectrum efficiency, communication delay, as well as energy consumption; however, it still has some shortcomings, such as security issues, mobility management, and handoff. The research community is now actively contributing for the next generation networks by adopting the D2D communication. This presentation will focus on discussing about the challenges, designs, and future research directions of D2D communication in 5G cellular networks.

Waleed E Al-Hanafy

Menoufia University, Egypt

Title: Efficient power allocations for multicarrier systems

Time : 16:40-17:15

Speaker
Biography:

Waleed E Al-Hanafy received BS and MS degrees from Menoufia University, Menoufia, Egypt, in 1996 and 2002, respectively, and PhD from University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK, in 2010, all in electronics engineering. He is working as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Faculty of Electronic Engineering, Menoufia University. His research interests are mainly in the signal processing for communications. He is a Member of IEEE and EURASIP societies and a Reviewer of many conferences and journals.

Abstract:

In OFDM, multiplexing over MIMO channels or general trans-multiplexing techniques a number of independent sub-carriers or sub-channels arise for transmission, which differ in SNR. Maximizing the channel capacity or data throughput under the constraint of limited transmit power leads to the well-known and simple water-filling algorithm. However, the performance of water-filling algorithm is generally degraded by the bit-loading following it. Alternatively, incremental bit-loading can optimize the data rate if greedy power allocation is considered. The problem of the greedy algorithm is its associated computation complexity bottleneck which prevents its use in many recent wireless applications. The focus of this presentation will be the simplified state-of-the-art greedy-based power allocation techniques. This presentation will provide novel computationally efficient sub-optimal greedy-based power allocation algorithms to maximize data rate of multicarrier systems. Moreover, mean BER enhancement of the resulting bit-loading can be achieved by considering residual power redistributions which aim to relate rate maximization in conjunction with margin maximization design problems. The evaluation will include analysis, simulation, and discussions of the results.

Abu Asaduzzaman

Wichita State University, USA

Title: Microelectronic sensor for DNA analysis

Time : 17:15-17:50

Speaker
Biography:

Abu Asaduzzaman is experienced in collaborative projects that involve research-oriented universities and leading high-tech industries in the U.S.A. Over 10 years of demonstrated teaching excellence in university education in the areas of computer architecture, parallel programing, embedded systems, and performance and power evaluation. Highly skilled in information technology (IT) with over a decade of experience in working with and working for major IT corporate clients (such as Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida and ECI IP Incorporated) using cutting edge technology. Extraordinary knowledge and experience of successfully applying innovative techniques for diverse populations of learners into classroom and online teaching. Principle investigator (PI) of many grants including WSU URCP Award 2014-2015, Wiktronics-WSU Embedded Systems Project 2014, Kansas NSF EPSCoR First Award 2013-2014, NVIDIA-WSU CUDA Teaching Project 2013, and M2SYS-WSU Biometrics Project 2012. Reviewed many NSF programs including TUES, GRFP, and EPSCoR RSV Panel-2. Authored more than 80 peer-reviewed research articles. TPC/IPC member of various conferences including IEEE IPCCC/ICCIT. Member of IEEE, ASEE, PKP, TBP, etc.

Abstract:

Multicore architectures suffer from high core-to-core communication latency due to the traditional wire based network and power-hungry cache’s unpredictable behavior. As the number of cores increases, managing the requests from many cores and satisfying the large number of requests as quickly as possible becomes a critical challenge. Studies suggest that a directory with the information about Level-1 Cache (CL1) blocks can be helpful in order to reduce the communication latency. The recently introduced wireless router in network-on-a-chip shows promise by efficiently handling many requests, simultaneously, faster and cheaper (consuming less energy). Therefore, we introduce a Level-2 Cache Mediator (L2CM) and a hybrid network (with wired and wireless routers) into a multicore/many-core system to improve system scalability. The proposed L2CM should have enough memory to store information about CL1 cached blocks, CL1 victim blocks, etc., and a wireless router for low-power fast communication with Central Processing Unit (CPU) cores. According to the experimental results, (considering communication delay and power consumption) the proposed architecture is better than mesh multicasting for all cases and is better than or as good as wireless network-on-a-chip. Experimental results suggest that the proposed L2CM may decrease the communication delay by up to 63% and the total power consumption by up to 33%.

Dr. S.S. Iyengar

Florida International University, USA

Title: The Internet: A Network of Networks
Speaker
Biography:

S. S. Iyengar is a Distinguished Ryder Professor and Director of the School of Computing and Information Sciences at the Florida International University and is the founding Director of the FIU-Discovery Lab. Iyengar is a pioneer in the field of distributed sensor networks/sensor fusion. Iyengar has published over 500 research papers and has authored/co-authored/edited 20 books published by MIT Press, John Wiley & Sons, Prentice Hall, CRC Press, Springer Verlag, etc. These publications have been used in major universities all over the world. Iyengar is a ACM Fellow, IEEE Fellow, AAAS Fellow, and NAI Fellow.

Abstract:

There is much dependency that is growing in this integrated world, both in the context of physical and virtual transfer of goods and information. More specifically, the Internet is basically a structure of networks that is connecting people around the world in a real time manner. The real issue of these networks is disruption by massive data flows, diverse traffic patterns, poor infrastructure, and political conflicts. This talk addresses challenges that exist both in the context of transportation and energy distribution networks.

Prof. Dr. János Levendovszky

Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Title: Quality-of-Service Routing Protocol for wireless sensor networks
Speaker
Biography:

Prof. Dr. J. Levendovszky received his MSc and PhD degree from the Budapest University of Tecyhnology and Economics. Presently he is a professor and head of the doctoral school at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Informatics of the same university. His present research includes adaptive signal processing, neural networks, communication protocols and financial computations. He has served as a guest professor at several European, US and South Korean universities.

Abstract:

In this paper, we develop novel algorithms to find the optimal, energy preserving, paths from Source Node (SN) to the Base Station (BS) in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Optimality is defined in a constrained sense, in which the minimal energy route is sought (to maximize the lifespan of WSNs) under reliability constraint, meaning that each packet must reach the BS with a given probability. Energy efficiency is going to be achieved by selecting nodes for multi-hop packet forwarding under information, which yields the most evenly distributed energy state over the network after the packet has reached the BS. There are many efficient protocols which increase the lifetime of sensor network such as LEACH, PEGASIS, and PEDAP. But they failed to provide energy balancing under reliability constraints. Solving this problem, we propose a new algorithm under name High Quality of service Routing Algorithm (HQRA), which is able to find near-optimal paths in WSNs by minimizing the energy but guaranteeing a given level of reliability, as well. New High Quality of Service Routing Algorithm for WSNs, which finds the minimum energy path from the SN to the BS and achieves a predefined level of reliability. The proposed method can run in polynomial complexity with respect to the number of nodes, by recursively using the Bellman-Ford algorithm. Furthermore, HQRA gave good results with any BS positioning in wireless sensor network. The simulation results will demonstrate that our algorithm is more efficient than the other routing protocols proposed before.

Speaker
Biography:

Caner Özdemir received the BSEE degree in 1992 from the Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey, and the MSE. and PhD degrees in Electrical & Computer Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin in 1995 and 1998, respectively. His research interests are radar signal processing, ground penetrating radar, th-the-wall imaging and antenna design. He has published more than 100 journal articles and conference/symposium papers on those fields. He is the author of the book titled “Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar Imaging with Matlab Algorithms”.

Abstract:

In this session, new and emerging antenna designs for various wireless applications will be covered. Any type of antennas from micro strip patches to Vivaldi antennas and from monopoles to conformal arrays that are used for emerging wireless technologies (WI-FI, WI-MAX, WI_LAN, LTE, cognitive radio networks, vehicular networks, security and privacy, car-to-car communication, mobile telecommunications, indoor/outdoor systems and experimental systems for future Internet research and many others) are welcome.

Speaker
Biography:

Dr. Eng. Sattar B. Sadkhan has completed his PhD at the age of 30 years from VAAZ- Academy in Brno- Czech Republic.. He is the Chairman of IEEE Iraq Section, and Chairman of URSI Iraq committee, and Honorable Research Director of IRAQ for (BRCORP). He has published more than 150 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as Chef – in - Editor for 8 International Journals, and Associate Editor in 7 (others) International Journals.

Abstract:

A multidisciplinary research effort focusing on secure wireless communication networks, motivated by the fact that the solutions to next-generation communications networks lie in a multidisciplinary research approach formed by electromagnetics, micro systems, digital signal processing, error control coding, cryptography , physics and information theory, is presented. For example chaos theory was originally developed by mathematicians and physicists. The theory deals with the behaviors of nonlinear dynamic systems. Therefore, and based on chaos theory features, the security research community adopts chaos theory in modern secure wireless communication networks. However, there are challenges of using chaos theory with secure communication. Also the multidisciplinary nature of the research in the field of Quantum Key Distribution Networks (QKDNs). Such networks consist of a number of nodes that can perform security protocols protected by some basic laws of physics. The operation of QKDNs mainly requires the integration of Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) protocols with the already-existing network security infrastructures.

  • Day 2

Session Introduction

Mehdi Shadaram

The University of Texas, USA

Title: Photonic generation of millimeter wave signals for wireless applications

Time : 12.35-13.10

Speaker
Biography:

Mehdi Shadaram is the Briscoe Distinguished Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Director of the Center for Excellence in Engineering Education at The University of Texas at San Antonio. His main area of research activity is in the broadband analog and digital fiber optic and wireless communications. He has published more than 120 articles in refereed journals and conference proceedings. He has been the General Chair, Session Chair, TPC Chair, and Panelist in several conferences. He is Senior Member of IEEE. He received his PhD in electrical engineering in 1984 from The University of Oklahoma.

Abstract:

Wireless transmission in the lower microwave band is congested by applications such as Wi-Fi, GSM, etc. Some other new wireless technologies (e.g., WiMAX) are still handled within the lower microwave regions (2–5 GHz). Therefore, unlicensed 60 GHz frequency band (57–64 GHz) and 70-94 GHz band have been considered in the last few years. In the United States, the 60 GHz band can be used for unlicensed short range data links. Propagation characteristics of the 60 GHz band like oxygen absorption and rain attenuation limit the range of communications systems which use this band. Also, geographical consideration is crucial for antenna Base Stations (BSs) installments. Because of large number of required BSs and the high throughput of each BS, deployment of an optical fiber backbone is necessary. Therefore, hybrid systems are considered to support the intense demand of high quality telecommunications services. Fiber backbone network is widely considered to support usage of unlicensed 60 GHz band. This network provides a broadband link between central office (CO) and BSs. This hybrid network can decrease the complexity and cost of the BSs by moving the routing, switching and processing functionalities to the CO. This way, the equipment cost can be shared among antenna BSs. Optical modulators such as Mach–Zehnder modulators (MZMs) can be utilized to generate optical millimeter wave signals. The lecture presents an overview of the photonic generation of millimeter wave signals for wireless applications. Different modulation methods are discussed and the performance analysis of transmission links is presented.

Mario Marques da Silva

Autonomous University of Lisbon, Portugal

Title: MIMO systems and applications

Time : 13.55-14.30

Speaker
Biography:

Mário Marques da Silva is an Associate Professor and the Director of the Department of Sciences and Technologies at Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa, Portugal. He is also a Researcher at Instituto de Telecomunicações, in Lisbon, Portugal. He received his BSc in Electrical Engineering in 1992, and MSc and PhD degrees in Electrical and Computers Engineering (Telecommunications), respectively in 1999 and 2005, both from Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon. Between 2005 and 2008, he was with NATO Air Command Control & Management Agency (NACMA) in Brussels (Belgium), where he managed the deployable communications of the new Air Command and Control System Program. He has been involved in multiple networking and telecommunications projects. He is the Author of four CRC Press books and of several dozens of journal and conference papers, a Member of IEEE and AFCEA, and Reviewer for a number of international scientific IEEE journals and conferences. He has also chaired many conference sessions and has been serving in the organizing committee of relevant EURASIP and IEEE conferences.

Abstract:

The use of multiple antennas at both the transmitter and receiver aims to improve performance or to increase symbol rate of systems, but it usually requires higher implementation complexity. The antenna spacing must be larger than the coherence distance to ensure independent fading across different antennas. Alternatively, uncorrelated signals in different antennas can be assured through the use of orthogonal polarizations. Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) architectures can be used for combined transmit and receive diversity, for the parallel transmission of data or spatial multiplexing. When used for spatial multiplexing, MIMO technology promises high bit rates in a narrow bandwidth. Therefore, it is of high significance to the spectrum users. In this case, MIMO system considers the transmission of different signals from each transmit element so that the receiving antenna array receives a superposition of all transmitted signals. All new ideas about how to improve performance, capacity and/or spectrum efficiency while keeping computational cost at an acceptable level have been described. Multi-user MIMO (MU-MIMO) has also been introduced, where multiple streams of data are simultaneously allocated to different users, using the same frequency bands. This concept is similar to Space Division Multiple Access (SDMA). Nevertheless, while SDMA is typically employed in the uplink, MU-MIMO is widely used in the downlink. MU-MIMO presents several constraints, as downlink channel state information is required at the base station side (transmitter), and the processing is implemented using pre-coding (instead of the conventional post-processing approach). Ideas and concepts on MIMO applications, such as base station cooperation, coordinated multi-point transmission or multi-hop relay are also described. These are effective mechanisms that improve the performance at the cell edge, while mitigating the negative effects of near-far problem and adjacent cell interference, resulting in a more homogenous service quality, regardless the users\\\' positions. These concepts can be viewed as special types of MIMO systems, but where the different transmit or receive antennas are not collocated, but positioned in different locations. It is known that around 50% of the operational costs associated to cellular communications rely on the energy consumption, which also has an implication in the carbon emission footprint. MIMO Systems and Applications can contribute to the concept of Green Radio Communications, while supporting a reduction in the energy consumption. This presentation will provide a technical assessment of each of the technologies associated to MIMO systems and applications, while indicating the constraints associated to each one.

Dr. Norman Shaw

IEEE-Standards Association, USA

Title: Location Technologies in Wireless Networks

Time : 14.30-15.05

Speaker
Biography:

Norman Shaw is a Director in the IEEE-Standards Association. He has worked in product development and standards at three (3) different wireless location technology companies and has over 20 years experience in the wireless industry. Norman has also served on advisory groups to the FCC on E-911 technologies and practices.

Abstract:

There are a number of different technologies currently employed for wireless location. These technologies can be broadly grouped into categories of: “satellite” or “terrestrial”, “handset based” or “network based”, and “trilateration/triangulation” or “pattern matching”. Each technology group comes with benefits and challenges and each has performance that is largely dictated by the local environment and morphologies (e.g. urban/rural, in-building/open-sky). This presentation will provide a technical assessment of each of the technology groups and specific technologies and will relate their capabilities. The evaluation will include operation of the technologies independently, as well as in combination “hybrid” operation.

Sameer Bataineh

Jordan Univesity of Science and Technology, Jordan

Title: Probabilistic approach to scheduling divisible load on wireless network of processors

Time : 15.05-15.40

Speaker
Biography:

Sameer Bataineh received the BS in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Syracuse University in 1985, and the MS and Doctorate degrees in Computer and Network Engineering from SUNY at Stony Brook in 1990 and 1992 respectively. He joind the EE Department at Jordan University of Science and Technology (JUST) in 1992. In 2002 he was Chairman of the Computer Engineering Department at JUST, and from 2004 to 2008 he was Dean of the IT College at JUST. Since 2008-2012 he worked as a Founder of Khalifa University at UAE and Dean of CIT College at UAEU. Currently he is the Dean of Graduate Studies at JUST.

Abstract:

Divisible Load Theory (DLT) merged as a very efficient tool to schedule arbitrarily divisible load on a set of network processors. Most of previous work using DLT assumes that the processors\\\' speed and links\\\' speed are time invariant. Closed time solution was derived for the system based on that the speed of processors and links stay the same during the task execution time. This assumption is not practical as most of the wireless connected processing elements used today have an autonomous control. In this paper we consider distributed wireless systemswhere the availability of the processors varies and it is following a certain distribution function. A closed form solution for the finish time is derived. The solution considers all system parameters such as the links\\\' speed, number of processors, number of resource, and availability of the processors and how much of their power they can contribute. The result of is shown and it measures the variation of execution time against the availability of processors.

Jing Wang

University of South Florida, USA

Title: Nanomaterials and additive manufacturing for RF, MW and THz devices

Time : 16.00-16.35

Speaker
Biography:

Jing Wang is an Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of South Florida. He got two MS degrees, one in Electrical Engineering (2000), the other in Mechanical Engineering (2002), and a PhD degree (2006) all from the University of Michigan. His research interests include RF/microwave/THz devices and microsystems, micro machined transducers, and functional nanomaterials. He has published more than 90 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers, while serving as reviewer for more than a dozen journals. His work has been funded by research grants from federal agencies (NSF, DTRA, US Army, US Air force) and contracts from more than a dozen companies. He is the chairperson for IEEE MTT/AP/ED Florida West Coast Section and he is also the faculty advisor for Florida IMAPS, AVS and IMS student chapters. He was elected as a member the prestigious IEEE MTT Technical Committee on RF MEMS topics. He currently acts as the general co-chair for the IEEE Wireless and Microwave Technology Conference (WAMICON 2015).

Abstract:

This talk will present our recent research in the area of synthesis, RF characterization, strategic design, and employment of functional nanomaterials for a wide variety of RF/MW/THz devices. Magneto-dielectric and high-k dielectric nanocomposites have been developed as a new class of materials well-suited for electromagnetic wave devices. In particular, magnetic/dielectric nanoparticles have been synthesized and evenly dispersed in a host polymer matrix to tailor its effective microwave properties, thus improving antenna performance (i.e., size, gain, bandwidth, efficiency). The RF properties, including permittivity, permeability, dielectric and magnetic loss tangents, were extracted over a wide frequency range (0.1-20 GHz), while monitoring the effects of the nanofillers reinforcement and externally applied magnetic field.The magneto-dielectric Fe3O4-PDMS composites have been incorporated into miniaturized multilayer patch antennas with center frequency of 4 GHz that exhibited 58% of bandwidth enhancement and 57% of size reduction. Meanwhile, the effects of the sintering and other processes were rigorously studied that has led to improved dielectric and loss properties. Specifically, PDMS nanocomposites with sintered NdTiO3 fillers have exhibited a high permittivity (r~12) and loss tangent (tanδd<0.01) at frequencies up to 17 GHz on par with the loss of the typical PCBs. This new class low-loss nanocomposite is an enabler for the next generation of RF/MW/THz devices. A 3D multi-material additive manufacturing process is going to be employed to produce miniaturized 3D conformal microwave components. The talk will be concluded with a brief discussion of other ongoing activities, which focus on development of transmission-line based microwave devices and millimeter wave dielectric waveguides, etc.

Speaker
Biography:

Juan A Paco Fernandez is Executive Director in the Rural Telecommunications Group of Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (GTR PUCP). He has worked in some of the most important telecommunications companies in Peru and has directed several ICT4D projects financed by international cooperation and research projects about WSN implementations and wireless networks in rural areas. Electronic Engineer by PUCP with postgraduate courses in telecommunications, he has over 17 years of experience and additionally is a Cisco CCNA Instructor in the Local Academy of PUCP.

Abstract:

In many rural areas of developing countries, there are no telecommunications services or are very limited. This is particularly severe in remote areas of very low density or high population dispersion. This condition has more serious implications in areas such as health or education and obviously, without access to telecommunications infrastructure, it is impossible to use the ICT tools currently available or perform other administrative activities or professional development. These rural areas, where the digital divide is wider, are not attractive to carriers or service providers, so it is expected that a significant number of them do not enjoy data transmission services in the medium term. In this perspective, the possibility of deploying community networks or private networks is at least interesting and perhaps achievable, especially for rural public institutions. Nevertheless, the sustainability of these networks and services represent the main problem to be faced, with many seemingly successful experiences which then, have shown that were not sustainable. This presentation, based on the experience gained by the Rural Telecommunications Group of PUCP in the implementation of various ICT projects in some of the most difficult and remote rural regions of Peru, will describe the different solutions implemented to ensure the sustainability of wireless telecommunications networks have been installed in the framework of these projects, then, will make a critical analysis of them, in light of its current status and results and finally will propose a generic scheme under which focus sustainability assurance, in the context of ICT development initiatives.

Mohamed M Hamdi

School of Communication Engineering, Tunisia

Title: Applications of homomorphic cryptography to the internet of things

Time : 17.10-17.45

Speaker
Biography:

Mohamed M Hamdi is an Associate Professor at the School of Communication Engineering (Sup\\\'Com, Tunisia) and Development Manager at Elgazala Technopark. His publications covered cyber security, wireless communications, optical communications and multimedia communications. He gave invited and keynote speeches at prestigious conferences including ITU World, IEEE CTS, and European Identity and Cloud. He has also co-chaired the elections committee of the IEEE CIS Technical Committee (2009 and 2011). Mohamed holds Eng, Master and Doctorate degrees in Telecommunications.

Abstract:

Emerging applications based on the IoT are introducing new security challenges. They operate in a dynamic environment dominated by the evolution of the security threats and the variation of network features (e.g., network topology, energy level). One of the major challenges that should be tackled is the trade-off between robustness and energy-efficiency. This strengthens the need for in-network processing such as aggregation and compression to limit the computational, memory, and storage overhead. Existing cryptographic algorithms and protocols are not compliant with such processing and turn out to affect the lifetime the mobile nodes being part of the IoT. To cope with this problem, homomorphic encryption is introduced in this talk as an alternative to improve the applicability cryptographic solutions to IoT-based applications. Concrete examples are described and analyzed in order to illustrate the potential brought by homomorphic encryption in providing energy-effective protection of the IoT.

Dr. Magdy A. Bayoumi

The Center for Advanced Computer Studies (CACS) –University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Title: Cyber - Physical Systems: Reality, Dreams, and Fantasy
Speaker
Biography:

Dr. Magdy A. Bayoumi is the Z.L. Loflin Eminent Scholar Endowed Chair Professor at The Center for Advanced Computer Studies (CACS), University of Louisiana at Lafayette (UL Lafayette). He was the Director of CACS, 1997 – 2013 and Department Head of the Computer Science Department, 2000-11. Dr. Bayoumi has graduated about 65 Ph.D. and 175 Master’s students. He has published over 500 papers in related journals and conferences. He edited, co-edited and co-authored 10 books in his research interests. He has been Guest Editor (or Co-Guest Editor) of 10 Special Issues in VLSI Signal Processing, Learning on Silicon, Multimedia Architecture, Digital and Computational Video, and Perception-on-a-Chip. He is an IEEE fellow. Dr. Bayoumi is the recipient of the 2009 IEEE Circuits and Systems Meritorious Service Award. He is also the recipient of the 2003 IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Education Award. Dr. Bayoumi has served in many editorial, administrative, and leadership capacities in IEEE Signal Processing Society, IEEE Computer Society, and IEEE Circuits and Systems (CAS) Society. He was the Vice President for Conferences, Vice President for Technical Activities, and a member of the Board of Governors and Executive Committee of CAS Society. He has been involved in many conferences, serving in different capacities. Some examples are: He is the General Chair, ICASSP 2017, New Orleans, General Chair, ICECS 2013, Dec. 2013, Abu Dhabi. General Chair, 2009 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP 2009), Cairo, Egypt, General Chair, IEEE International SymposiSymposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS 2007), New Orleans, LA; General Chair, SiPS 2000, Lafayette, LA. He was and has been Associate Editor of several IEEE/other journals, e.g. the Transaction on Image Processing and Transaction on VLSI Systems, Dr. Bayoumi served on the Distinguished Visitors Program for IEEE Computer Society, 1991-1994. He, also, served on Circuits and Systems Distinguished Speakers Program, 2011-2013 and 1999-2001. He is on the IEEE Fellow Committee and he was on the IEEE CS Fellow Committee. He was the chair of an international delegation to China, sponsored by People-to-People Ambassador, 2000. He received the French Government Fellowship, University of Paris Orsay, 2003-2005 and 2009. He received the United Nation Fellowship, Egypt, 2002-2003. He was a Visiting Professor at King Saud University. He was on the advisory board, Lafayette Economic Development Authority (LEDA); He is a member of Lafayette Chamber of Commerce. He was on the Governor’s commission for developing a comprehensive energy policy for the State of Louisiana. Dr. Bayoumi was a technology columnist and writer for Lafayette newspaper, "The Daily Advertiser."

Abstract:

The integration of physical systems with networked sensing, computation networks, and embedded control with actuation has led to the emergence of a new generation of engineered systems, the Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS). Such systems emphasize the link between cyber space and physical environment (i.e., time, space, and energy). CPS represents the next generation of complex engineering systems. They are large scale dynamic systems that offer significant processing power while interacting across communication networks. CPS will help to solve the grand challenges of our society, such as, aging population, limited resources, sustainability, environment, mobility, security, health care, etc. Applications of CPS cover a wide band of economic, medical, and entertainment sectors. It includes; Transportation: automobiles, avionics, unmanned vehicles and smart roads; Large Scale Critical Infrastructure: bridges, mega buildings, power grid, defense systems; Health Care: medical devices, health management networks, telemedicine; Consumer Electronics: video games, audio/video processing, and mobile communication. Building Cyber-Physical Systems is not a trivial task. The difficulty arises from the existing gap in modeling and computing of the physical and cyber environments. The design process require new theories, models, and algorithms that unify both environments in one framework. None of the current state-of-the art methods are able to overcome the challenges of developing the unified CPS design paradigm. Several of these issues will be discussed in this talk. Case studies of real world CPSs will be illustrated.

Speaker
Biography:

Professor Ezendu Ariwa holds the position of Professor in Computer Science at University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom, Department of Computer Science & Technology, with speciality in Practice in Computing. He is also a Visiting Professor at Gulf University, Bahrain, Visiting Professor in Engineering Sustainability and ICT, Anadolu University, Turkey, Visiting Professor, University of Lagos, Nigeria, Visiting Professor and Co-Director of the Centre of Excellence in Cloud Computing, IAMTECH University, Sierra Leone and Visiting Professor, Kano State Polytechnics, Nigeria as well as Visiting Affiliate of the Green IT Observatory, RIMT University, Australia and Visiting Affiliate of ICT University, USA. He also holds the position of Director - Technical and Non-Executive Director and Research Professor for Enterprise Projects at Sun Bio IT Solutions Pvt. Ltd, India. He is also the Chair for the IEEE Consumer Electronics Chapter, United Kingdom & Republic of Ireland (UKRI), Chair for the IEEE Broadcast Technology Chapter, UKRI and Chair for the IEEE Technology Management Council Chapter, UKRI. He is a Senior Member of Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (SMIEE); Chartered FELLOW of the British Computer Society (CITP, FBCS), Fellow of the Institute of Information Technology Training (FIITT), Fellow of Institute of Leadership and Management (FInstLM), Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA).

Abstract:

Green Computing and Wireless Communications Engineering Sustainability remains an essential aspect of providing improved transmission portfolio for delivering effective communication services that will enable the achievement of energy saving and environmental sustainable applications in both the business and industrial sectors. The issue of virtual usability and awareness management strategy may result in achieving excellence in energy efficiency and usage, environmental considerations and energy re-use strategic models. The return on investment (ROI) as strategic outcome of the model may restore organisations with huge energy wastage without thinking of cost, environmental impact and carbon emissions.

Dr. Clayton Stewart

University College London, London

Title: Tactical Communications
Speaker
Biography:

Dr. Stewart is Visiting Professor Electronic and Electrical Engineering Department, University College London and consultant US DARPA, NSF, and others. 2007-2013 he was Technical Director US Office of Naval Research Global. Prior he served as Corporate Vice President/Manager Reconnaissance and Surveillance Operation, SAIC; Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering and Associate Director Centre of Excellence in Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence, George Mason University; Program Manager Artificial Ionospheric Mirror radar system; Principal Investigator Signal Processing, Sperry Corporate Technology Centre; Deputy Director Tactical Systems Division, Air Force Studies and Analyses, US Pentagon; and Associate Professor Electrical Engineering, US Air Force Academy.

Abstract:

This Tactical Communications workshop will cover the general area of military tactical communications, including voice and data. The electromagnetic spectrum will be discussed, and the communications bands will be defined. Various propagation modes will be considered including radio frequency line-of-sight, troposcatter, satcom, and ionospheric skywave, as well as optical. We will also consider anti-jam techniques such as frequency hopping and direct sequence spread spectrum as well as adaptive nulling of the antenna. The software defined radio and cognitive radio approaches will be discussed. In addition various modulation and multiplexing schemes will be described. The treatment will also include data links for ISR platforms. Specific systems employed by the US and NATO forces will be discussed such as Joint Tactical Information Distribution System (JTIDS), Link 11, Link 16, Link 22, Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T), Common Data Link (CDL), Tactical Common Data Link (TCDL), Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC), Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) system. The principles of network centric warfare will be considered.

Dr. Adnan Al-Anbuky

Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

Title: Federated Sensor Clouds and Spatial Ambient Intelligence
Speaker
Biography:

Adnan Al-Anbuky http://www.sense.aut.ac.nz/adnan.cfm is a full professor of Electrical & Electronic Engineering and director of the Senor Networks and Smart Environment research laboratory at Auckland University of Technology. He has numerous publications and have delivered good number of keynote or public talks at specialized conferences as well as academic and research institutions.

Abstract:

Modern enabling technologies like the Internet of Things IoT and Cloud Computing have opened up more doors for emphasising the importance of the field of wireless Sensor Network. Research and development of concepts related to sensor networks are emphasising the various modes of communication including Cognitive networking, Opportunistic connectivity and Machine-to-Machine communication. Areas like data and reality mining, cyber-physical systems and others, with emphasis on spatio-temporal coverage, have started formulating highly complex dynamic systems. With the need for integrating the multiple subspaces and multiple phenomena, these systems are centred round federation of sensor clouds over the Internet.These systems are driving towards the smart cities and what has been referred to as the planet nervous system. While elements of the concept have started taking shape, there are significant operational and optimization challenges that need to be addressed. The talk will provide key highlights to the large scale systems organization and the role of key acting elements in facilitating efficient services. The roles of sensor clouds and related big data, the Internet and related IoT architecture and the virtual Cloud and related services will be discussed. Examples taken from the experience of AUT SeNSe research laboratory will be used for demonstrating the various aspects of the system architecture. Furthermore the talk will shed the light on the future directions of these technologies as it contributes to the fabrics of Smart Cities.

  • Day 3
Speaker
Biography:

Ezendu Ariwa holds the position of Professor in Computer Science at University of Bedfordshire, UK, Department of Computer Science & Technology, with speciality in Practice in Computing. He is also a Visiting Professor at Gulf University, Bahrain, Visiting Professor in Engineering Sustainability and ICT, Anadolu University, Turkey, Visiting Professor, University of Lagos, Nigeria, Visiting Professor and Co-Director of the Centre of Excellence in Cloud Computing, IAMTECH University, Sierra Leone. He also holds the position of Director - Technical and Non-Executive Director and Research Professor for Enterprise Projects at Sun Bio IT Solutions Pvt. Ltd, India. He is also the Chair for the IEEE Consumer Electronics Chapter, UK & Republic of Ireland (UKRI). He is a Senior Member of Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (SMIEE); Chartered FELLOW of the British Computer Society (CITP, FBCS). He is the Founding Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Green Computing (IJGC), Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Computing and Digital Systems (IJCDS), Journal of E-Technology. He is author of a number of books and more than 200 papers published in international journals and conference proceedings. He recently published a book on Green Technology Applications for Enterprise and Academic Innovation, 2014; Publisher: IGI Global, USA.

Abstract:

Vamsi Krishna Paruchuri

University of Central Arkansas, USA

Title: Reliable broadcasting in heterogeneous wireless networks

Time : 11.30-12.00

Speaker
Biography:

Vamsi Paruchuri is an Associate Professor in Computer Science at University of Central Arkansas. His research interests are in the broad area of Ad Hoc Wireless and Sensor Networks, Vehicular Networks and Security. He holds a patent on Privacy Preserving Health Records. He has published over seventy papers in journals and conference proceedings. He is PI of NSF funded grant. He served as Technical Program Chair in over twenty different major conferences sponsored by IEEE, ACM and others. He received his PhD in computer science from Lousiana State University and his MS in Electrical Engineering from Ohio State University.

Abstract:

Broadcasting is a fundamental operation in wireless networks and plays an important role in the communication protocol design. Wireless transmissions are unreliable; it is possible for packets to be lost due to interference, transmission errors or collisions. Such losses reduce the delivery ratio (number of nodes that receive the broadcast message). The loss rate can be considerable if high interference exists or if link quality is low. In this presentation, we address the problem of reliable broadcasting in spite of collisions and transmission losses. The aim is not to achieve reliable broadcast to all nodes in the network; rather, the aim is to ensure reliable broadcast to a desired percentage of nodes. We present a geometric based, probabilistic model to predict the optimal transmission range for maximizing 1-hop broadcast coverage in wireless networks as a function of range, sending rate and density. We demonstrate how the adaptation techniques can be incorporated into different broadcasting protocols.

Dr. Ramjee Prasad

Center for TeleInfrastruktur (CTIF), Aalborg University, Denmark

Title: The Power of 5G WISDOM Wireless Communications
Speaker
Biography:

Ramjee Prasad has completed his M.Sc. (1970) and Ph.D. (1979) from Birla Institute of Technology, Ranchi, India. He is currently the Director of the Center for TeleInfrastruktur (CTIF), Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark, and holds a Professor Chair in Wireless Information Multimedia Communications. He has a long path of achievements in the academic, managerial, research, and business spheres of the mobile and wireless communication area. He is Fellow of IEEE, IET, IETE, and WWRF as well as the recipient of the Knight of the Order of Dannebrog (2010) awarded by the Queen of Denmark among other numerous awards. He has over 1000 publications.

Abstract:

Despite the large variety of existing communication systems, each development has been motivated by the same goal: to provide universal service facilities to users, while maintaining or increasing profitability. Interoperable, ubiquitous and dynamic are key objectives for fifth-generation (5G) communication systems and applications. WISDOM is a vision of for a global 5G wireless communication system realized by universally deployable converging technologies to enable personalized wireless services and applications at a data rate of more than one terabit per second (Tbit/s), with coverage extending from a city, to a country, to the continents and to the world, that will enable user-centric mega-communications. This talk will discuss the technical challenges to realizing WISDOM as well as the WISDOM enabling potential to deal with the complexity of the emerging user expectations for novel personalized usage scenarios bringing about a myriad of high-quality services not for the mere sake of transmitting data but for enabling the virtualization of the reality of the human emotions, senses, and feelings. WISDOM is a wireless system that allows to establish and maintain ubiquitous human bonds and not merely wireless connections. This talk explores novel boundaries for next generation human-bond communication systems and outlines the major technological challenges.

Speaker
Biography:

Marcelo Sampaio de Alencar received his Ph.D. from University of Waterloo. He is Chair Professor at the Department of Electrical Engineering, Federal University of Campina Grande (UFCG), Brazil. He is founder and President of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Communications (Iecom) and Vice-President of the Brazilian Telecommunications Society (SBrT). He has been awarded several scholarships and grants, including an achievement award for contributions to the Brazilian Telecommunications Society, an award from the Medicine College of the Federal University of Campina Grande, an achievement award from the College of Engineering of the Federal University of Pernambuco, and the Academic Medal professor Attílio José Giarola from the Brazilian Microwave and Optoelectronics Society. He published over 350 engineering and scientific papers and 16 books. He is a Registered Professional Engineer, and a columnist for the traditional Brazilian newspaper Jornal do Commercio.

Abstract:

The wireless channel suffers from attenuation and multipath fading, which result from multipath transmission, and also from propagation effects, that include reflection, diffraction and scattering. Multipath fading is a major cause of performance degradation in mobile communications systems. Modulation diversity is a bandwidth-efficient diversity technique that consists of the rotation of a digital signal constellation, associated with the interleaving between the in-phase and quadrature components. It is intended to reduce the effects of fading in wireless communications. In this presentation a scenario is considered in which multiple paths are simulated, with associated random multiplicative noise and delay. The evaluation of the multipath fading effect in this scenario is done by comparing BER values for 4-PSK and 8-PSK transmissions, to obtain the gain provided by the modulation diversity. An analysis of the optimum rotation angle is provided, which consider several multipath scenarios, and include cases with a more severe fading effect.