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J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves (PI) Hamid Sadjadpour Katia Obraczka Muriel Medard Andrea Goldsmith Pravin Varaiya Rajive Bagr

J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves (PI) Hamid Sadjadpour Katia Obraczka Muriel Medard Andrea Goldsmith Pravin Varaiya Rajive Bagrodia Mario Gerla Nitin Vaidya Tony Ephremides. UCSC: MIT: Stanford University: UC Berkeley: UCLA: UIUC: University of Maryland:.

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J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves (PI) Hamid Sadjadpour Katia Obraczka Muriel Medard Andrea Goldsmith Pravin Varaiya Rajive Bagr

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  1. J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves (PI) Hamid Sadjadpour Katia Obraczka Muriel Medard Andrea Goldsmith Pravin Varaiya Rajive Bagrodia Mario Gerla Nitin Vaidya Tony Ephremides UCSC: MIT: Stanford University: UC Berkeley: UCLA: UIUC: University of Maryland: http://www.soe.ucsc.edu/research/ccrg/DAWN

  2. Agenda • 7:30 Registration and breakfast • 8:00 Welcome and introductions • 8:15 ARO Remarks (Bob Ulman, ARO) • 8:30 DAWN overview (J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, UCSC) • 9:05 Cooperative Communication in Wireless Networks Using Random Coding (Tony Ephremides, Maryland, Maryland) • 9:40 How To Turn on The Coding in MANETs (Chris Ng, MIT) • 10:15Coffee break • 10:30 Node Cooperation and Cognition in Wireless Networks (Andrea Goldsmith, Stanford) • 11:05 Distributed Online Simultaneous Fault Detection for Multiple Sensors (Pravin Varaiya, UC Berkeley) • 11:40 The Capacity of Ad-hoc Networks: Beyond The Gupta-Kumar Barrier (Hamid Sadjadpour, UCSC) • 12:15 Lunch

  3. Agenda (2) • 1:45 Towards Scale-Free Routing in MANETs (J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, UCSC) • 2:20 Multicast Applications: From ProbeCast to RelayCast (Mario Gerla, UCLA) • 2:55 Multi-Paradigm Evaluation of Heterogeneous Wireless Networks (Rajive Bagrodia, UCLA) • 3:30Coffee break • 3:45 Exploiting Multiple Channels in Wireless Networks (Nitin Vaidya, UIUC) • 4:20 COMMUNITY: Communication in Heterogeneous Networks Prone to Episodic Connectivity (Katia Obraczka, UCSC) • 4:55 Conclusions (J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, UCSC) • 5:10+Government caucus • Feedback to DAWN team

  4. A “Science of Networking” fundamental limits logic analytical models Lower-bound Upper-bound simulations APPLICATION collaborative applications… TRANSPORT end-to-end transport protocols… NETWORK routing-structure maintenance opportunistic packet forwarding interconnection LINK synchronization transmission scheduling neighborhood discovery PHYSICAL Antennas, radios protocols and architectures Technical Approach What is the performance of specific protocols with a specific PHY? What is the best that we can possibly do? Is the protocol correct?

  5. Project Structure DAWN JJ Garcia-Luna-Aceves (PI) Task 1: A. Ephremides JJ Garcia-Luna-Aceves M. Medard K. Obraczka H. Sadjadpour N. Vaidya P. Varaiya Task 2: A. Goldsmith A. Ephremides Task 3: JJ Garcia-Luna-Aceves M. Gerla M. Medard K. Obraczka N. Vaidya Task 4: JJ Garcia-Luna-Aceves K. Obraczka Task 5: R. Bagrodia Task 6: M. Gerla K. Obraczka P. Varaiya

  6. Summary of Scientific Progress Another Impressive year in terms of quantity and quality of research output! • 20 journal papers published or accepted for publication. • ACM WINET, IEEE Trans. Information Theory, IEEE Trans. Comm., IEEE Trans. Wireless Comm, JSAC, Ad Hoc Networks • 71 peer-reviewed papers in conference proceedings • ACM MobiCom, ACM MobiHoc, IEEE Infocom, IEEE SECON, and IEEE MASS • 12+ manuscripts submitted • 3 Ph.D. theses completed • Intercampus collaboration

  7. Summary of Scientific Progress THREE BEST PAPER AWARDS • Best Paper Award (selected from 250 submissions): R. Menchaca-Mendez and J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, “Scalable Multicast Routing in MANETs Using Sender-Initiated Multicast Meshes,” Proc. IEEE MASS 2008: Fifth IEEE International Conference on Mobile Ad-hoc and Sensor Systems, September 29– October 2, 2008, Atlanta, Georgia. • Best Paper Award : D. ONeill, A. Goldsmith, and S. Boyd, ”Optimizing Adaptive Modulation in Wireless Networks via Utility Maximization,” Proc. IEEE ICC 2008, Beijin, China, May 2008. • Best Student Paper Award: Vartika Bhandari and Nitin H. Vaidya, ”Capacity of Multi-Channel Wireless Networks with Random (c, f ) Assignment, ” Proc. ACM MobiHoc 2007, September 9-14, 2007, Montral, Canada.

  8. Summary of Scientific Progress Recognized Technical Leadership: • Ephremides (Maryland): Invited plenary talk at the Information Theory Workshop in Porto, Portugal, May, 2008 • Imvited plenary talk at the WPMC in Lapland, September 2008. • J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves (UCSC): General Chair, MobiCom 2007 • Andrea Goldsmith (Stanford): President-Elect: IEEE Information Theory Society (for 2009) Stanford Postdoc Mentoring Award. • Muriel Medard (MIT): 2007 Gilbreth Lectureship from the National Academy of Engineering Elected a Fellow of the IEEE • Pravin Varaiya (UCB): 2008 AACC Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award Honorary Doctorate, Technical University of Crete

  9. Summary of Scientific Progress • New fundamental results on the capacity of wireless networks. • Novel ideas on the effect and practical use of network coding in ad hoc networks • New analytical models of the performance of various communication protocols • New results on cross-layer interaction and optimization • Novel approaches to routing in connected and disconnected wireless networks • New approaches to information dissemination • New techniques for large-scale simulations and testing

  10. Dynamic Ad Hoc Wireless Networks: From Theory to Practice • What: • A book consisting of original chapters contributed by DAWN researchers, with its target audience being the academic community and program managers in funding agencies. • Each chapter addresses some aspect(s) of the research carried out in DAWN, or the importance and application of “network science.” Edited by JJ & Bob • Why: • We need a publication with larger visibility than scattered papers (even though they are great papers!) to amplify the impact of our work. • A single reference of salient work done during the first 2+ years of DAWN on the science of networks and its implications (to DoD and others) is important to the success of DAWN, but is perhaps even more important beyond DAWN “Science matters” and “universities leading high-impact research matters.” • How: • 14 chapters already being planned, we need to pursue chapters on “needs and implication,” and we are still soliciting chapters! • Need to work hard to have draft chapters ready by end of the year • Proposal to be submitted to selected publishers (PH & IEEE) with at least a couple of chapters plus the abstracts and outline of entire book.

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