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Program
Participants
Session I Summary
Session II Summary
Session IV.a Summary
Session IV.b Summary
Overarching
Presentations:
Deborah Estrin
Gary Shaw
Matteo Neale Paris
Bruce Hajek
Martin Vetterli
Greg Pottie
Kannan Ramchandran
Feng Zhao
Babak Hassibi
P.R. Kumar
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NSF Workshop on Distributed Communications
and Signal Processing for Sensor Networks
Chairs: Thrasyvoulos
N. Pappas and
Aggelos K. Katsaggelos
Session Chairs: David Neuhoff, Akbar Sayeed, Gary Shaw,
Randy Berry, Feng Zhao, Greg Pottie
NSF Representatives: John Cozzens, Julia Abrahams,
Filbert Bartoli, Taieb Znati, Mari Maeda
December 3-4, 2002
The goal of the workshop was to identify promising directions
for near and long-term fundamental research in the areas of
distributed communications and signal processing for sensor
networks, and to report these findings in a timely fashion to
the cognizant research communities via this website.
This coincides with the release of the new NSF program
solicitation on Sensors and Sensor Networks now available at
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2003/nsf03512/nsf03512.htm.
The goal of NSF's initiative, as explained in NSF 03-512, is
to advance fundamental knowledge in the areas of new sensor
technologies, including sensors for chemical and biological
agents, sensor networking systems in a distributed
environment, the integration of sensors into engineered
systems, and the interpretation and use of sensed data in
decision-making processes. In particular, NSF is looking for
proposals that address designs, materials and concepts for new
sensors and sensing systems; arrayed sensor networks and
networking; and interpretation, decision and action based on
sensor data.
Many of the important topics identified by workshop
participants, and appearing in the taxonomy, are clearly
applicable to the above; however, we caution the reader that
this list is by no means all-inclusive. In addition, since
the new initiative focuses on basic research in the cognate
areas, topics such as benchmarking are not appropriate.
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