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Leveraging Information Technology and Telecommunications for Crisis Management

Leveraging Information Technology and Telecommunications for Crisis Management. Invited Talk to The Workshop on Crisis Response University of California, Irvine March 19, 2002. Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technologies

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Leveraging Information Technology and Telecommunications for Crisis Management

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  1. Leveraging Information Technology and Telecommunications for Crisis Management Invited Talk to The Workshop on Crisis Response University of California, Irvine March 19, 2002 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technologies Professor, Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering Jacobs School of Engineering, UCSD

  2. IT and Telecomm are the Key Technologies for Crisis Management • How Do We Know: • The Detailed Current State of the System NOW? • What the Future Evolution of the Situation is Likely to Be? • How Can We Achieve: • An Overall Situational Awareness? • A Common Operational Picture? • How Do We Communicate With: • Crisis Managers? • First Responders? • How Can We Decide: • Which Problem to Attack First? • Which Assets Should Be Deployed Where and When?

  3. How Can the “Future Internet” Enhance Capabilities for Emergency Preparedness? • Enabled by Expansion of Internet Infrastructure • Wireless Extends Coverage Everywhere • Optical Backbone Provides High Bandwidth • New Generation of Sensors and Receivers • Three Tier System • Wireless SensorNets Brings Data to Repositories • Collaborative Crisis Management Data Centers • Remote Wireless Devices Interrogate Databases • Building a “Living-in-the-Future” Laboratory • UCSD, UCI, and SDSU Campuses • San Diego, Orange County, Cross Border • Collaboration with City, County, and State Govts.

  4. Cal-(IT)2 Has an Emerging Focus on Homeland Security • UCSD Chancellor is Leading Campus-wide Discussions • UCI Has Submitted ITR on Crisis Management • Cal-(IT)2 Meetings with SD County, Cal OES, SPAWAR, SAIC • System Integrate Early Warning Systems • Developing MEMS to Nano Wireless Chem/BioSensors • Set up Prototype Distributed Disaster Response System • High Tech Coast GIS coupled to XML Mediation • Medical Record Distributed Database as Early Project • Ubiquitous Connectivity Expanded to First Responders

  5. A Layered Software Architecture is Needed for Defense and Civilian Applications SPAWAR Systems Center San Diego www.ndia-sd.org/docs/NDIA_20June00.pdf

  6. Cal-(IT)2 -- An Integrated Approach to Research on the Future of the Internet 220 UCSD & UCI Faculty Working in Multidisciplinary Teams With Students, Industry, and the Community Over Fifty Industrial Partners www.calit2.net

  7. Building “Living Laboratories” • Extend Research Outside of Building • Using the Internet to Create Laboratories • Students, Faculty, and Industry • In Partnership with Surrounding Communities • Focus on Dual Use for Crisis Management • Civil Infrastructure • California Water System • Transportation

  8. Using Students to Invent the Futureof Widespread Use of Wireless Pocket PCs • Year- Long “Living Laboratory” Experiment 2001-02 • Computer Science & Engineering Undergraduates • 500+ Wireless-Enabled HP Pocket PCs at UC San Diego • 50 Compaq Pocket PCs at UC Irvine • Currently Using Local Area Network Wireless Internet • Experiments with Geo-location and Interactive Maps UC Irvine UC San Diego Cal-(IT)2 Team: Bill Griswold, Gabriele Wienhausen, UCSD; Rajesh Gupta, UCI

  9. The FCC Unlicensed Band Can be Used to Create a High Speed Wireless Backbone • The High PerformanceWireless Research and Education Network • A Cal-(IT)2Academic Partner • Enabling a Broad Set of Science Applications and Crisis Management • Allows for Internet Deployment to Remote Locations NSF Funded PI, Hans-Werner Braun, SDSC Co-PI, Frank Vernon, SIO 45mbps Duplex Backbone http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/topo.html

  10. HPWREN Project Demo of Fast Setup Wireless Internet for Crisis Response A Cal-(IT)2Academic Partner http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/Presentations/HPWREN/Slide26.JPG

  11. Cal-(IT)2 is Developing the Required Wireless Services Middleware UCI Wireless Infrastructures UCSD Wireless Infrastructures Applications Wireless Services Interface Location Awareness Mobile Code Security Data Management Power Control Real-Time Services J. Pasquale, UCSD, Cal-(IT)2

  12. Operating System Services are Needed for Power / Performance Management • Management of Power and Performance • Efficient Way to Exchange Energy/Power Related Info • Among Hardware / OS / Applications • Power-Aware API Application Power Aware API Power Aware Middleware POSIX PA-OSL Operating System Modified OS Services Operating System PA-HAL Hardware Abstraction Layer Hardware Rajesh Gupta UCI, Cal-(IT)2

  13. What is a SensorNet? • Sensors • Physical, Chemical, Biological, Imaging,… • Sensor Platform • Computing, Power, Storage, Radios, … • Telecommunications Infrastructure • Wired, Wireless, Internet, … • Sensor Arrays • Homogeneous, Inhomogeneous, Ad Hoc, … • Layered Software • Backend Data Systems

  14. Low Power Biological, Chemical, Pollutant, Magnetic, Particulate Sensor Development • Designed to Be Easily Manufactured • Can Be Chemically Modified to Be Specific • Compatible With Silicon Microfabrication Technologies • Special Properties: • Low False Alarm Rate, Sensitive • Miniature, Portable, Lower Cost • Target Markets: • Industrial Waste, Pollution Monitoring • Monitoring Public Spaces • Law Enforcement, First Responders, Medical Personnel Handheld Nanosensor Device for Sarin Nerve Agent Developed for DARPA Micro Unattended Ground Sensors program Mike Sailor, UCSD Chemistry, Cal-(IT)2

  15. Automobiles will Become SensorNet Platforms • Campus Partnering for Implementation • UC Irvine’s Institution of Transportation Studies • UCSD Computer Vision and Robotics Research • Caltrans ATMS Testbed + Cal-(IT)2 = ZEVNET • 50 Toyota Zero Emission Vehicles (ZEV) • Add GPS Tracking, Wireless Communications “Living Laboratory” Source: Will Recker, UCI

  16. Real-Time Monitoring of BridgesThrough Wireless Internet SensorNets Local Data Hub Wireless Internet Control PC104 Center Data-Loggers Workstation Caltrans Sensor Users UCSD Sensor UCI Maria Feng UCI Civil & Environmental Engineering

  17. Millions of Video Cameras Will Add Image Data Streams to the Net • London Underground • Initially 25,000 Video Cameras • Expansion to 250,000 Possible • British Transport Police Switch to Any Camera in 1 Sec. • Source: Telindus • British CCTV System • Currently 2.5 Million CCTV Cameras Installed (NY Times) • Average London Citizen is Seen by 300 Cameras Per Day • Face Recognition Software Added in High Crime Areas • Up to 6 Million Surveillance Cameras Across the USA in 5-7 Years • Privacy International Prediction

  18. Experimenting with the Future -- Wireless Internet Video Cams & Robots Useful for Quick Response to Disasters Linked by 1xEV Cellular Internet Mobile Interactivity Avatar Computer Vision and Robotics Research Lab Mohan Trivedi, UCSD, Cal-(IT)2

  19. Integrate Remote Reconnaissance with Satellite Imagery and Ground SensorNets HOTLINKs for Damage Locations using GPS and Digital Photos on GIS Maria Feng UCI Civil & Environmental Engineering

  20. Data and Knowledge SystemsAre the Heart of Crisis Management Web Portal Customized to User Device Visualization Data Mining, Simulation Modeling, Analysis, Data Fusion • Sensornets—Real-Time Data • ROADNet • ActiveCampus • Health of Civil Infrastructure • AUTONET Knowledge-Based Integration Advanced Query Processing Database Systems, Grid Storage, Filesystems High speed networking Networked Storage (SAN) Storage hardware

  21. GIS Based Crisis Management Software Tools--SAIC’s Consequences Assessment Tool Set (CATS) • Prediction of Disaster Evolution • Hurricane, Earthquake, Terror • Casualty Distribution Probabilities • Response Management Source: SAIC

  22. CATS California Governmental Users Burbank Fire Department Chino Valey Independent Fire District City of Anaheim City of Bakersfield Fire Department Colton Police Department Fremont Fire Department Kern County Fire Dept Idyllwild Fire Protection District Kings County Fire Department Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department Marin County Fire Department Metro Water District of Southern CA Red Bluff Police Department Sacramento Reg. Fire/EMS Comm Center San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Depart. San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District San Diego County of Environmental Health San Diego County Health and Human Services San Diego County Office of Disaster Preparedness San Diego Fire and Life Safety Services San Diego Police Department Shasta County Sherrif Yuba City Fire Department

  23. Data Mining Across Agency Stovepipes Is an Essential Next Step CRIMINAL JUSTICE EMERGENCY RESPONSE INFORMATION SOURCES Federal INTEGRATEDINTELLIGENCE SYSTEM State PUBLIC HEALTH SECURITY Local Cal-(IT)2 is Partnering With SAIC and Campuses On Emergency Preparedness Plan

  24. Multi-Sensor Data Fusion Control Rooms Will Integrate SensorNets with Legacy Data • Integrate • Situational Awareness • Common Operational Picture • Local Data Warehouse with Remote Data Access • AI Data Mining of Distributed Databases • Spatial Data Analysis • Consequences Assessment Tool Set Source: Panoram Technologies

  25. Developing Optically Linked Distributed Analysis, Command, & Control Centers • Driven by Data-Intensive Applications • Real Time Seismic • Emergency Response • Medical Imaging • Linked UCSD and SDSU • Dedication March 4, 2002 Linking Control Rooms Cox, Panoram, SAIC, SGI, IBM, TeraBurst Networks SD Telecom Council

  26. Next Step is to Create a SoCal Optical Experimental Network

  27. Using the Internet to Link Multiple Sites into a Collaborative Interactive Visualization Space Access Grid is Being Used in Over a Hundred Sites Access Grid Lead-Argonne NSF STARTAP Lead-UIC’s Elec. Vis. Lab

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