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Self-IoT: Self-aware Internet of Things
Important Dates
- Paper submissions due: March 14, 2013, 11:59 p.m. PDT
- Notification to authors: April 15, 2013
- Final paper files due: May 22, 2013
Overview
Spectacular advances in technology have introduced increasingly complex and large scale computer and communication systems. Autonomic computing has been proposed as a grand challenge that will allow systems to self-manage this complexity, using high-level objectives and policies defined by humans. Internet of things (IoT) will exponentially increase the scale and the complexity of existing computing and communication systems; the autonomy is thus an imperative property for IoT systems. However, there is still a lack of research on new techniques adapted to the IoT context or on how to adapt and tailor existing research on autonomic computing to the specific characteristics of IoT such as high dynamicity and distribution, real-time nature, resources constraints, and lossy environments.
Following the successful first edition of the Self-IoT workshop held in conjunction with the ICAC '12, ICAC '13 will host this special track on Self-aware Internet of Things that aims at drawing the attention of both IoT and autonomic computing communities to the emerging needs and challenges for self-aware IoT. The main goal is to gather different scientific communities from academy and industry under one common objective: realizing plug-n-play, context-aware and autonomous Internet of things that will be self-configured, self-organized, self-optimized and self-healed without (or with minimum) human intervention.
The Self-IoT track welcomes original research papers related to self-management in IoT. Besides theoretical aspects, Self-IoT is also interested in practical results of self-management in IoT applications. The non-exclusive list of topics of interest is as follows:
- Software engineering for self-adaptive Internet of things, model-oriented approaches, automated tools for development, deployment and supervision of IoT devices and services
- Plug-n-play IoT, IoT device/service discovery protocols, self-matchmaking of Internet of things and Internet of services
- Modelling environmental context and user behaviour, semantic IoT, self-adaptation to context
- Autonomous IoT clouds, self-provisioning of IoT services
- Control theory in IoT, distributed control loops, decision making mechanisms, prediction models at run-time, learning from experience, relations with artificial intelligence techniques, multi-agent approaches for autonomic IoT
- Event-Condition-Action rules, objective functions, prediction models applied to the IoT, adaptation of techniques such as Bayesian networks, decision trees or fuzzy logic to the IoT context
- Performance monitoring, diagnostics and self-healing in IoT
- Autonomic security and dependency management; robust and trustable IoT systems
- Self-organizing network protocols, ad-hoc routing mechanisms, cognitive networks adapted to resource constrained devices and lossy environments
- Autonomic experience in IoT applications such as smart home/building, smart transport, smart city, smart healthcare and smart retailer
- Autonomicity and self-management in M2M communication systems and networks; autonomicity support in IPv6
- Modeling, measurement, and simulation of multi-networks of autonomic IoT applications, such as energy sensing and management, vehicle control, mobile devices, and emergency management
The Self-IoT track is sponsored by three European projects on IoT: BUTLER, iCore, and IoT.est, which belong to the IERC-European Research Cluster on the Internet of Things.
Submissions
Submissions to the IoT track follow the same guidelines as described in the main ICAC '13 Call for Papers. In order to submit your work to the IoT track, please do so via the Web submission form for this special track, as opposed to the submission form for the general ICAC '13 track.
Self-Aware Internet of Things Organizers
Program Vice-Chairs
Levent Gürgen, CEA-Leti, France
Klaus Moessner, University of Surrey, UK
Abdur Rahim Biswas, Create-Net, Italy
Program Committee
Ranganai Chaparadza, IPv6 Forum & ETSI AFI, Germany
Suparna De, University of Surrey, United Kingdom
Joerg Denzinger, University of Calgary, Canada
Khalil Drira, LAAS-CNRS, France
Erol Gelenbe, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Raffaele Giaffreda, Create-Net, Italy
Hiroyuki Maeomichi, NTT, Japan
Thierry Monteil, LAAS-CNRS, France
Jorge Pereira Carlos, Atos, Spain
Davy Preuveneers, KU Leuven, Belgium
Romain Rouvoy, INRIA, France
Eric Rutten, INRIA, France
Nicolas Sabouret, LIP6, France
Kenji Tei, NII, Japan
Ralf Toenjes, University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück, Germany
Takuro Yonezawa, Keio University, Japan
Rui Zhang, Parc, USA
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