2. mar. 2010

CFP: MST Journal Special Issue on WSN: Designing for Real World Deployment

Call for papers

 

Measurement Science and Technology Journal (Institute of Physics)

 

Special Issue on

 

Wireless Sensor Networks: Designing for Real-World Deployment and

Deployment Experiences

 

A vast number of protocols, architectures and design methods for

Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) have been proposed within the last

decade. Analytical methods, simulation tools and laboratory

experimentation were used to validate the proposals and demonstrate

that the solutions put forth should work as expected. However, many

such solutions failed (and sometimes quite dramatically) when deployed

in a real-world application context. This is often the consequence of

making ill-informed assumptions about the environment in which the WSN

will be deployed, lack of attention to specific conditions that will

be encountered in the deployment and incomplete application

specification. In addition, good solutions for many important

real-world deployment problems are missing. For example, mechanisms

for dealing with missing data, in-network debugging tools or fault

management strategies for real deployments are required.

 

This special issue has several aims:

 

·      to collect insights from real-world deployment efforts that can

help the WSN community to better understand the issues needed to be

accounted for when designing WSN protocols, architectures and

algorithms;

 

·      to document particular real-world deployment issues encountered

by practical scientists and highlight more generic WSN solutions and

tools born from practical, deployment experience;

 

·      to report on WSN protocols and mechanisms that have had, in the

past, only a theoretical treatment but have recently been proven to

work well in real-world deployments.

 

We are seeking contributions describing innovative work in the realm

of real-world WSN deployments. Topics of interest include, but are not

limited to:

 

·      Issues with deployment assumptions: setting realistic

application requirements; user interaction with the WSN design process

and with the end systems; the use of communication channel and sensor

and sensing models; experiences with communication protocols, energy

management and expected network lifetime; in-network processing;

real-time issues in deployed systems; effective information extraction

strategies.

 

·      Supporting tools and methods for real-world deployment:

deployment and debugging tools; on-the fly programming, configuration

and installation support; management of deployed sensor networks;

security, availability and dependability issues in sensor networks;

fault-tolerance and troubleshooting sensor networks; network health

monitoring and management; practical medium access control protocols;

topology control and routing protocols in real-world deployments;

practical localization and time synchronization.

 

·      Novel real-life WSN applications: deployment success stories

leading to technology adoption; failure stories leading to iterative

hw/sw developments and re-deployment; novel measurement instruments

based on WSNs.

 

 

 

Notes for Prospective Authors: The scope of this call is restricted to

work that falls within the remit of the MST Journal. Articles should

bring forth new WSN based measurement techniques and systems,

significant improvements to existing measurement techniques or

describe the application of existing techniques in novel situations.

 

Submitted papers should not have been previously published nor be

currently under consideration for publication elsewhere.  Expanded,

archival versions of papers delivered at technical conferences are

welcomed.

 

Important dates:

 

Extended abstract deadline: 15th March 2010 (by email to e.gaura@coventry.ac.uk)

 

Manuscript submission deadline: 31st March 2010

 

Expected Publication date: December 2010 (available on-line from November 2010)

 

Manuscript Submission Instructions for Prospective Authors:

 

Please follow the MST journal manuscript format described at

http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/-page=extra.2/MST and submit your papers

to the online submission and reviewing system or by email, as per

instructions at http://www.iop.org/EJ/submit/0957-0233 . In the

“special issue details” box (or in the email subject line) write

“Wireless Sensor Networks”. Papers should be up to 10 journal pages in

length, or 8500 words.

 

Guest editors:

 

Prof. Elena Gaura

 

Cogent Computing Applied Research Centre, Coventry University, UK

 

www.cogentcomputing.org

 

e.gaura@coventry.ac.uk

 

Dr. Utz Roedig

 

Infolab21, Lancaster University

 

http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/~roedig/index.html

 

u.roedig@lancaster.ac.uk

 

Dr. James Brusey

 

Cogent Computing Applied Research Centre, Coventry University, UK

 

www.cogentcomputing.org

 

j.brusey@coventry.ac.uk

 

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