Student Poster Session
MobiCom 2004 will include a Student Poster Session on Wednesday afternoon, 3:00pm-5:00pm, featuring posters that present recent and on-going research by students on mobile computing and wireless and mobile networking topics. The following student posters have been accepted for presentation at MobiCom 2004:-
Weighted Way Mobility Model and Its Impact on Ad Hoc Networks
Kashyap Merchant, Wei-jen Hsu, Haw-wei Shu, Chih-hsin Hsu and Ahmed Helmy (University of Southern California, U.S.A.) -
Quality of Authentication in Ad Hoc Networks
Seung Yi and Robin Kravets (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A.) -
Data Acquisition in Multiple-sink Sensor Networks
Abhimanyu Das and Debojyoti Dutta (University of Southern California, U.S.A.) -
A Closed Queueing Network Model for Describing the Backoff Procedure
of the IEEE 802.11 DCF
Jaehyuk Choi, Joon Yoo and Chongkwon Kim (Seoul National University, Korea) -
A Note on Channel-Aware Fair Medium Access Control in Ad Hoc Networks
with MIMO links
Dong Zheng and Junshan Zhang (Arizona State University, U.S.A.) -
Geographic Routing in City Scenarios
Christian Lochert, Martin Mauve (University of Duesseldorf, Germany), Holger Fuessler (University of Mannheim, Germany) and Hannes Hartenstein (University of Karlsruhe, Germany) -
Cooperation-Optimal Protocols: A New Solution Framework for Designing
Incentive-Compatible Routing and Forwarding Protocols in Wireless Ad
Hoc Networks
Sheng Zhong (Yale University, U.S.A.), Li (Erran) Li (Bell Laboratories, U.S.A.), Yanbin Grace Liu (The University of Texas at Austin, U.S.A.) and Yang Richard Yang (Yale University, U.S.A.) -
TITAN: On-Demand Topology Management in Ad Hoc Networks
Cigdem Sengul and Robin Kravets (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A.) -
Perceptive Admission Control: A Simple Mote-based Scenario
Ian D. Chakeres (University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S.A.), Joseph P. Macker (Naval Research Laboratory, U.S.A.) and Elizabeth M. Belding-Royer (University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S.A.) -
Architecting a High-Capacity Last-Mile Wireless Mesh Network
Ashish Raniwala and Tzi-cker Chiueh (Stony Brook University, U.S.A.) -
Congestion Adaptive Routing in Ad Hoc Networks
Harish Raghavendra and Duc A. Tran (University of Dayton, U.S.A.) -
Privacy Preserving Mobile Services: An Access Control System for
Moving Objects and Customer Profiles
Mahmoud Youssef, Nabil R. Adam and Vijayalakshmi Atluri (Rutgers University, U.S.A.) -
A Rate Control Mechanism for Energy Efficient Many-to-One
Communication
Vartika Bhandari and Nitin H. Vaidya (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A.) -
A Context Based Storage System for Mobile Computing Applications
Sharat Khungar and Jukka Riekki (University of Oulu, Finland) -
How to Implement DHT in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks?
Himabindu Pucha, Saumitra M. Das and Y. Charlie Hu (Purdue University, U.S.A.) -
A Distributed Network Synchronization Algorithm for Wireless Ad Hoc
Networks
Carlos H. Rentel and Thomas Kunz (Carleton University, Canada) -
Probabilistic Coverage for Object Tracking in Sensor Networks
Shansi Ren (College of William and Mary, U.S.A.), Qun Li (Darmouth College, U.S.A.), Haining Wang, Xin Chen and Xiaodong Zhang (College of William and Mary, U.S.A.) -
Efficient Broadcasting in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks Using Directional
Antennas
Fei Dai and Jie Wu (Florida Atlantic University, U.S.A.)
Poster Details |

A poster is a 30 inch by 40 inch rectangular board on which you can affix visually appealing material that describes your research. How you use this is up to you: you may choose to print out several 8.5"x11" or A4 sheets of paper (e.g., paper copies of overheads) and "tile" the poster board with these pages. Or, you may choose to print a single large sheet of paper describing the work and attach that to the poster board. We will provide poster boards on which you can affix your material, or you may bring your own poster board if you like. Several document companies like Kinko's produce professional-looking posters from material produced on software like Powerpoint; you may want to use such a facility.
You should prepare the best material (visually appealing and succinct) that effectively communicates your research problem, techniques, and results, and what is novel and important about your work. Plan your poster so that the important points can be understood quickly and clearly by groups of people standing in front of your poster as they move around during the poster session.
For More Information |

For more information about the MobiCom 2004 Student Poster Session, please contact the Student Poster Session co-chairs Stefano Basagni and Chiara Petrioli.


Advance Program | Tutorials | Panel | Demos and Exhibits | Workshops | Corporate Supporters
Invited Talks | Paper Abstracts | Student Posters | Welcome Message

