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6th ACM MobiHoc Workshop on the Frontiers of Networks: Theory and Algorithms

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Program

Monday, Jun 25, 2018

8am - 8:45am    Registration (E-VI 1st Floor Lobby)
8:45am - 9am    Opening remarks

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

9am - 10am    Session I (30 min talks)

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

Approximate optimality of separation in cache-aided wireless interference networks

Suhas Diggavi (University of California, Los Angeles)

Timely-Throughput Optimal Scheduling with Prediction

Longbo Huang (Tsinghua University)

10am - 10:30am    Break
10:30am - 12pm    Session II (30 min talks)

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

Learning and Games in Spectrum Sharing

Jean Walrand (University of California, Berkeley)

Towards an Economic Internet: from communicating data to exchanging value on networks

Bhaskar Krishnamachari (University of Southern California)

Transparency and Control in Platforms & Networked Markets

Adam Wierman (Caltech)

12pm - 1:30pm    Lunch (on your own)
1:30pm - 2:30pm    Session III (30 min talks)

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

Optimal Maxing, Ranking, and Preference Learning

Alon Orlitsky (University of California, San Diego)

An Online Learning Approach to Network Application Optimization with Guarantee

John Lui (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)

2:30pm - 3:00pm    Break
3:00pm - 4:30pm    Session IV (30 min talks)

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

Cache-aware load balancing of data center applications

Aaron Archer (Google Research)

A Simple Steady-State Analysis of Load Balancing Algorithms in the Sub-Halfin-Whitt Regime

Lei Ying (Arizona State University)

Accuracy vs. Learning Rate of Replacement Algorithms in Cache Systems

Srinivas Shakkottai (Texas A&M University)

4:30pm     Closing remarks

Room: E-VI Mong Auditorium (Room 180)

Welcome to the Sixth Workshop on the Frontiers of Networks: Theory and Algorithms, to be held in coordination with MobiHoc 2018. The workshop will bring together different research communities that utilize analytical methods to model, design and evaluate large scale networked systems. The format of the workshop is to hold invited talks of 30 minutes duration each, and to explore a range of cutting edge topics in the space of communication, routing, scheduling, learning, games and optimization. Each speaker has made significant contributions to their respective areas, and will bring a unique perspective on the topic of interest.

Committees

Workshop Co-Chairs

  • Srinivas Shakkottai, Texas A&M University

Program Committee

  • Longbo Huang, Tsinghua University
  • Srinivas Shakkottai, Texas A&M University
  • Lei Ying, Arizona State University