Important dates
EXTENDED Submission deadline: February 5, 2011 Notification of acceptance: March 10, 2011 Camera-ready paper due: March 28, 2011 Early registration deadline: April 10, 2011 Workshop date: May 9, 2010 (Monday)
Workshop Chairs
Nihar Jindal, U Minnesota
Olivier Leveque, EPF Lausanne
Program Committee
Francois Baccelli, INRIA/ENS, Paris
Charles Bordenave, U Toulouse
Martin Haenggi, U Notre-Dame
Armand Makowski, ISR/U Maryland
Ayfer Ozgur, EPF Lausanne
Guodong Pang, Penn State U
Patrick Thiran, EPF Lausanne
Milan Vojnovic, Microsoft Research
Additional information
For Registration, Lodging and Travel please consult WiOpt 2011
Keynote Speaker: Jeffrey Andrews (U texas, Austin)
Invited Speakers:
Bartek Blaszczyszyn (INRIA/ENS, Paris)
Sae-Young Chung (KAIST, Seoul)
Massimo Franceschetti (UC San Diego)
Urs Niesen (Bell Labs, NJ)
Xinzhou Wu (Qualcomm, NJ)
The performance of wireless networks depends critically on the spatial configuration of the transmitters, receivers and relaying nodes. As a result, the modeling of such networks requires methods and tools from point process theory, stochastic geometry and random graph theory. The art of modeling wireless networks is strongly multi-disciplinary, combining these spatial, stochastic tools with information and communication theory, networking theory, combinatorics, and game theory. SpaSWiN is the first workshop specifically devoted to the use of spatial stochastic models for improved design of wireless networks. Building on the success of the six previous venues of the workshop: in Riva del Garda (2005), Boston (2006), Limassol (2007), Berlin (2008), Seoul (2009), and Avignon (2010), the goal of SpaSWiN 2011 is to bring together researchers from the various disciplines involved in spatial models of wireless communications. Please join us in Princeton, New Jersey on May 9, 2011.
The technical program committee is soliciting contributions that employ spatial stochastic models - including, but not limited to, point processes, stochastic geometry, discrete and continuum percolation, and random graphs - to design and analyze wireless networks. All aspects and technologies of wireless networking will be considered, including (but not limited to): ad hoc, cellular, mesh, sensor, mobile, hybrid, and two-tier networks; models for coverage, connectivity, capacity, delay, energy efficiency; distributed routing and scheduling protocols and algorithms; network information theory; power and topology control; mobility models.
Authors are invited to submit titles and extended abstracts. Submitted manuscripts should not exceed 6 pages in length, including figures, appendix and bibliography. Abstracts should be formatted in two columns with a point size greater or equal to 10pt. Submissions will be done electronically in Adobe PDF format. Accepted abstracts will be published in (post)-workshop materials, with the copyright left to the authors. Authors will be offered the possibility to have their 6-page abstracts listed in the IEEExplore as well as in the IEEE digital library, with IEEE publication status.
Papers may be submitted through EDAS. -->