GlobalSIP 2013 Symposium on Network Theory
GlobalSIP 2013 Symposium on Network Theory
Understanding networks and networked behavior has emerged as one of the foremost intellectual challenges of the 21st century. It is fair to say that in the last fifty years we have been able to engineer networks that have transformed our world. Yet, while we obviously master the technology to do so, our theoretical understanding of fundamental phenomena that arise in networked systems remains limited. The purpose of this symposium is to bring together researchers from Signal Processing, Information Theory, and Controls to share their recent progress in the development of a fundamental understanding of networks and networked behavior.
Invited Tutorial Talks:
▪ G. Kramer, Technische Universität München (TUM)
"Multi-Terminal Information Theory for Channels with Block Fading and Fast Feedback"
▪ F. Baccelli, UT Austin
"Adaptive Spatial Aloha, Fairness and Stochastic Geometry"
▪ A. Hero, University of Michigan
TBA
Submissions of at most 4 pages in two-column IEEE format are welcome on topics including:
Wireless networkingDistributed signal processingSocial NetworksBiological networksNetwork information theoryNetwork codingDistributed storage systemsMulti-agent systemsIn-network computationsNetworked control systems
Paper Submission
Submit papers of at most 4 pages in two-column IEEE format through the GlobalSIP website at http://www.ieeeglobalsip.org/Papers.asp.
Important Dates
Paper Submission Deadline:
June 15, 2013
Review Results Announce
d: July 30, 2013
Camera-Ready Papers Due:
September 7, 2013
Organizing Committee
Alejandro Ribeiro, University of Pennsylvania
Deniz Gunduz, Imperial College London
Victor Preciado, University of Pennsylvania
Technical Program Committee
Soummya Kar
Ioannis Schizas
Usman Khan
Shuguang Cui
Elza Erkip
Osvaldo Simeone
Ali Tajer
Jasper Goseling
Bobak Nazer
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2013-12-03 00:00:00
2013-12-06 00:00:00
GlobalSIP 2013 Symposium on Network Theory
Understanding networks and networked behavior has emerged as one of the foremost intellectual challenges of the 21st century. It is fair to say that in the last fifty years we have been able to engineer networks that have transformed our world. Yet, while we obviously master the technology to do so, our theoretical understanding of fundamental phenomena that arise in networked systems remains limited. The purpose of this symposium is to bring together researchers from Signal Processing, Information Theory, and Controls to share their recent progress in the development of a fundamental understanding of networks and networked behavior.
Austin, TX
Deniz Gunduz
[email protected]
America/New_York
public
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Austin, TX
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