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MiSeNet '13: Proceedings of the 2nd ACM annual international workshop on Mission-oriented wireless sensor networking
ACM2013 Proceeding
Publisher:
  • Association for Computing Machinery
  • New York
  • NY
  • United States
Conference:
MobiCom'13: The 19th Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking Miami Florida USA 4 October 2013
ISBN:
978-1-4503-2367-3
Published:
04 October 2013
Sponsors:

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Abstract

It is our great pleasure to welcome you to The Second ACM Annual International Workshop on Mission-Oriented Wireless Sensor Networking -- ACM MiSeNet'13. The second edition of this year's workshop is the premier forum for presentation of research results and experience reports on leading edge issues of mission-oriented wireless sensor networks, including models, systems, applications, and theory. The mission of the workshop is to understand the major technical and application challenges as well as exchange and discuss scientific and engineering ideas related to architecture, protocols, algorithms, and application design in mission-oriented wireless sensor networks, and identify new directions for future research and development. ACM MiSeNet gives researchers and practitioners a unique opportunity to share their perspectives with others interested in the various aspects of mission-oriented wireless sensor networking.

The call for papers attracted 12 submissions from Africa, Asia, Canada, Europe, and the United States. The program committee accepted 8 papers that cover a variety of topics, including data delivery in vehicular networking, data aggregation, quality of event assessment, human-machine interactions, graph-based modeling, reachability verification, indoor location fingerprints, and queuing modeling for delay analysis in missionoriented sensor networks. In addition, the program includes a keynote speech by Prof. Jie Wu on the trajectory optimization for mobile chargers in wireless sensor networks. We hope that these proceedings will serve as a valuable reference for researchers and developers in the area of mission-oriented wireless sensor networking.

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SESSION: Keynote address
keynote
On optimal scheduling of collaborative mobilechargers in wireless sensor networks

The limited battery capacity of sensor nodes has become the biggest impediment to wireless sensor networks (WSNs) applications over the years. Recent breakthroughs in wireless energy transfer based on rechargeable lithium batteries provide a promising ...

SESSION: Modeling
research-article
Modeling and analysis of bi-connected minimum energypath preserving graphs for wireless multi-hop networks

opology control (TC) algorithms in wireless multi-hop networks create connected communication subgraphs that satisfy some desirable topological properties such as minimum-energy, fault tolerance, minimum interference, and bounded node degree. However, ...

research-article
Queuing modeling for delay analysis in mission oriented sensor networks under the protocol interference model

The success and increasing deployment of mission-oriented sensor networks has required sensors to collaboratively accomplish many complex real time tasks. In this paper, we focus on many-to-one mission-oriented sensor networks, where data are collected ...

SESSION: Applications
research-article
Catching up with traffic lights for data delivery in vehicular ad hoc networks

The data delivery in vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs) is based on the wireless communication among vehicles (V2V) and infrastructures (V2I). This delivery obviously depends on the mobility of the vehicles (e.g. with carry-and-forward). However, the ...

research-article
Total variation regularization for training of indoor location fingerprints

Location fingerprinting is a common approach to indoor localization. For good accuracy, the training set of sample fingerprints, each mapping a fingerprint to a location, should be sufficiently large to be well-representative of the environment in terms ...

research-article
A framework for assessing the quality of event detection in sensor networks

Despite the multitude of protocols that have been designed for event monitoring in sensor networks, very little work has been devoted to assessing the quality of these protocols in terms of their ability to provide timely and accurate information about ...

SESSION: Human-machine interactions, reachability, and aggregation
research-article
Human-machine conversations to support mission-oriented information provision

Mission-oriented sensor networks present challenging problems in terms of human-machine collaboration. Human users need to task the network to help them achieve mission objectives, while humans (sometimes the same individuals) are also sources of ...

research-article
SensorChecker: reachability verification in mission-oriented sensor networks

This paper presents novel techniques to verify the global reachability in mission-oriented wireless sensor networks (Mission-Oriented WSN). The global reachability verification considers configurations such as forwarding information and awake/dormant ...

research-article
Toward aggregating time-discounted information

This paper provides a way to think formally about the aggregation processes that take place in networks where individual actors (whether sensors, robots, or people) possess data whose value is discounted over time. The various actors use data to make ...

Contributors
  • Pennsylvania State University
  • Frank H. Dotterweich College of Engineering
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Acceptance Rates

MiSeNet '13 Paper Acceptance Rate 8 of 12 submissions, 67%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 8 of 12 submissions, 67%
YearSubmittedAcceptedRate
MiSeNet '1312867%
Overall12867%