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ESSA 2009 : Workshop on Sensor Networks for Earth and Space Science Applications | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://ipsn.acm.org/2009/workshops.html | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
IPSN Workshop
Sensor Networks for Earth and Space Science Applications (ESSA2009) Held in conjunction with IPSN 2009 Conference, San Francisco, CA, April 16, 2009 Wireless sensor networks and their applications have grown steadily during the past decade as a result of the convergence of various technologies spanning wireless, data processing algorithms, computing hardware, storage, and sensor capabilities. The pervasive nature of static and mobile sensors scattered throughout the environment enables multi-resolution capture of environmental or ambient information that serve as the basis of intelligence for knowledge inference and decision-making. Information processing for sensor networks enable new capabilities to operate autonomously and learn, perceive, reason, and react intelligently to their environments. Large scale sensor networks are now being used in a number of Earth and Space Science applications, including large-area terrestrial systems for geologic monitoring, volcano/plume monitoring, seismic (earthquake) monitoring, large-scale ocean monitoring for tsunamis, storm surges, plumes, algae blooms, and weather forecasting systems comprised of aerial and ground/coastal nodes. Such Earth and Space sensor networks are now evolving from “passive observation and reporting systems” to “active and reactive systems” that dynamically evolve in response to complex and rapid spatio-temporal events. This workshop is a forum for scientists and researchers to present new ideas and papers on sensor networks applications in the areas of Earth and Space Science. Papers on all aspects of Earth and Space Applications can be submitted to this workshop. We expect this workshop to have invited papers as well as contributed papers. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: • Monitoring of long range and large-scale phenomena • Geologic and Seismic monitoring • Chemical plumes and other atmospheric events • Oceanic events prediction and monitoring • Sensor networks applications in near space and deep space • Data fusion, compression, and processing for sensor webs • Simulation, emulation, and experiments on sensor networks for Earth and Space Science • Databases, data search/mining technologies and knowledge extraction mechanisms from sensor networks in Earth and Space Science • Information management, and data visualization and display techniques for sensor networks • Signal processing, control, and resource management solutions for sensor networks • AI and machine learning for sensor networks • Intelligent networking and routing protocols for optimal operation of large-scale sensor networks Dates: Submission: February 2, 2009 Notification of Acceptance: March 7, 2009 Final Version Due: March 22, 2009 All papers must be submitted in standard ACM proceedings format with 2 columns not exceeding 8 pages. Please see the website for more details on paper submission. General Chair: Srikanta Kumar, BAE Systems Program Co-Chairs: Ashit Talukder, JPL and Cauligi Raghavendra, USC Program Committee: Larry Bergman, JPL Prasanta Bose, Lokheed Martin, David Corman, Boeing John Dolan, CMU Bhaskar Krishnamachari, USC Kirk Martinez, University of Southampton Mahta Moghaddam – Univ of Michigan Robert Morris, NASA Ames Nikunj C. Oza, NASA Ames Anand Panangadan, JPL/CHLA Glenn Prescott, NASA Earth Science Technology Office John Stankovic, Univ. of Virginia Publicity Chair: Anand Panangadan, JPL/CHLA |
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