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September 2 - 4, 2011
Banff, Canada
Conference Program and Information Booklet
Organized by
St. Francis Xavier University, Canada
Sponsored by
IEEE, IEEE Computer Society
IEEE Technical Commitee on Scalable Computing
Program Overview Page 1-3
HPCC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees Page 4-10
HPCC 2011 Keynote Page 11
UIC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees Page 12-14
UIC 2011 Keynotes Page 15-16
ATC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees Page 17-19
ATC 2011 Keynote Page 20
FTDCS 2011 Organizing and Program Committees Page 21 FTDCS 2011 Keynote Page 22
Sessions of HPCC/UIC/ATC/ FTDCS/AHPCN 2011 Page 23-38
Sessions of MELT/USST/USWAN/ESCAPE/ECMA/SHPCC 2011 Page 38-44
Registration Desk Page 45
Name Badge and Meal Tickets Page 45
Presentation Information Page 45
Conference Venue Page 46
Travel Guide Page 47
Conference Hotel Campus Map Page 48
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
IEEE HPCC/UIC/ATC/FTDCS 2011 Program Overview
Friday September 2, 2011
Meeting Room 1
(MB Auditorium) (200)
Meeting Room 2
(MB 251) (60)
Meeting Room 3
(MB 252) (60)
Meeting Room 4
(MB 253) (60)
Meeting Room 5
(MB 150) (50)
Meeting Room 6
(MB 151) (15)
08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony (MB Auditorium)
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break (MB Central Foyer)
11:00-12:20 HPCC1: System Architectures I
UIC 1: Smart Object and Environments
ATC 1: Autonomic Architectures,
Models & Systems I
MELT:
Mobile Entity Localization and
Tracking
FTDCS 1:
Opening Session/Services, Cloud Computing
USST 1: Ubiquitous Service Systems and
Technologies I
12:30-13:30 Lunch (Vistas Dining Room)
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 HPCC 2: System Architectures II
UIC 2: Mobile Computing and
Services
ATC 2: Trusted and Secure Computing
EMCA 1: Embedded Multicore Computing
and Applications I
FTDCS 2:
Web Services and Cyber-Physical
Systems
USST 2: Ubiquitous Service Systems and Technologies II
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break (MB Central Foyer)
16:15-17:30 HPCC 3: Multicore
Systems
UIC 3: Wireless Sensor Networks
ATC 3: Autonomic Communications
EMCA 2: Embedded Multicore Computing and Applications II
FTDCS 3: Network and Real-Time
Communications
ESCAPE 1: Extreme Scale Computing
Application Enablement I
17:30-19:30 Reception
2
Saturday September 3, 2011
Meeting Room 1
(MB Auditorium) (200)
Meeting Room 2
(MB 251) (60)
Meeting Room 3
(MB 252) (60)
Meeting Room 4
(MB 253) (60)
Meeting Room 5
(MB 150) (50)
Meeting Room 6
(MB 151) (15)
08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C. M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 HPCC 4: Embedded
Systems UIC 4: P2P/Ad Hoc
Network USWAN 1: Mobile
Networks
AHPCN 1: Cluster, Grid and Cloud
Computing
FTDCS 4: Distributed Database
Management
ESCAPE 2: Extreme Scale Computing
Application Enablement II
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break (MB Central Foyer)
11:00-12:20 HPCC 5: Wireless
Networks
UIC 5: Social and Ubiquitous Computing
USWAN 2: Vehicular Networks
AHPCN 2: Distributed Systems
and Applications
FTDCS 5: Wireless and Secure
Communications
ESCAPE 3: Extreme Scale Computing
Application Enablement III
12:30-13:30 Lunch (Vistas Dining Room)
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel: Challenges and Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel: Evaluation of High-Performance Computing Systems: How Well Are We Doing?
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break (MB Central Foyer)
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel: Challenges and Directions for Ubiquitous/Pervasive Health-care
20:00-22:00 Banquet
3
Sunday September 4, 2011
Meeting Room 1
(MB Auditorium) (200)
Meeting Room 2
(MB 251) (60)
Meeting Room 3
(MB 252) (60)
Meeting Room 4
(MB 253) (60)
Meeting Room 5
(MB 150) (50)
Meeting Room 6
(MB 151) (15)
08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer)
09:45-10:45
HPCC 6: Performance
Evaluation and Measurement I
UIC 6: Context-Aware Technologies
ATC 4: Reliable, Secure and Trust
Applications
AHPCN 3: System Architectures
HPCC 7: Performance
Evaluation and Measurement II
AHPCN 4: Scientific & Engineering
Computing
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break (MB Central Foyer)
11:00-12:20 HPCC 8: Scheduling,
Services and Reliability
UIC 7: Algorithms for Ubiquitous Intelligence
ATC 5: Autonomic Architectures,
Models & Systems II
AHPCN 5: Mobile and Pervasive
Computing
HPCC 9: Scientific and Engineering
Computing I
AHPCN 6: Parallel/Multicore
Computing
12:30-13:30 Lunch (Vistas Dining Room)
13:30-14:45 HPCC 10: Distributed
Systems and Applications
UIC 8: Security and Privacy
UIC 9: Cloud and Services Computing
AHPCN 7: Network Designs and Routing
Algorithms
HPCC 11: Scientific and Engineering
Computing II
SHPCC 1:
Substainable HPC Cloud Computing I
14:45-16:00 HPCCS 12: Grid, Cluster and Cloud
Computing I
UIC 10: Energy Efficient Computing
UIC 11: Ubiquitous Intelligent Computing
Models
HPCC 13: Grid, Cluster and Cloud
Computing II
HPCC 14: GPU Computing
SHPCC 2:
Substainable HPC Cloud Computing II
16:00 See you in HPCC 2012 !
4
HPCC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees
General Chairs
Jesús Carretero, University Carlos III of Madrid, Spain Alok N. Choudhary, Northwestern University, USA Ruppa K. Thulasiram, University of Manitoba, Canada
Program Chairs
Parimala Thulasiraman, University of Manitoba, Canada Robert L. Clay, Sandia National Laboratories, USA Daniel J. Quinlan, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
Program Vice-Chairs
Parallel and Distributed System Architectures Avery Ching, Yahoo!, USA Parallel and Distributed Software Technologies Seetharami Seelam, IBM, USA Parallel/Multicore and Distributed Algorithms and Applications Ashok Srinivasan, Florida State University, USA Embedded Systems Ian McLoughlin, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Grid, Cluster and Cloud Computing Eric Aubanel, University of New Brunswick, Canada Web Service and Internet Computing Kin F. Li, University of Victoria, Canada Performance Evaluation and Measurement Flori Isaila, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain Distributed Systems and Applications Hermann Hellwagner, Klagenfurt University, Austria High Performance Scientific and Engineering Computing Raffaele Montella, University of Naples Parthenope, Italy Database Applications and Data Mining Reda S. Alhajj, University of Calgary, Canada Biological/Molecular Computing Umit Catalyurek, Ohio State University, USA Network Protocols and Routing Algorithms Anu Bourgeois, Georgia State University, USA Pervasive/Ubiquitous Computing and Intelligence Julien Bourgeois, University of Franche-Comte, France Mobile Computing and Wireless Communications Uyen Trang Nguyen, York University, Canada Autonomic, Reliability and Fault-tolerance Li Bai, Temple University, USA Trust, Security and Privacy Gregorio Martinez Perez, University of Murcia, Spain
Panel Chair
J. Nelson Amaral, University of Alberta, Canada
Workshop Chairs
Amiya Nayak, University of Ottawa, Canada Xingang Liu, Yonsei University, Korea Jemal H. Abawajy, Deakin University, Australia
Steering Chairs
Laurence T. Yang, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Beniamino Di Martino, Second University of Naples, Italy
5
Publicity Chairs
Carlos Westphall, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Wenbin Jiang, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China Damien Sauveron, University of Limoges, France Mianxiong Dong, University of Aizu, Japan Chao Chen, University of Florida, USA Jiehan Zhou, University of Oulu, Finland Agustinus Borgy Waluyo, Monash University, Australia Senol Z. Erdogan, Maltepe University, Turkey Xu Li, University of Waterloo, Canada Weiwei Fang, Beijing Jiaotong University, China
Local Chairs
Andy Yongwen Pan, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Alice Ying Huang, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Shizheng Jiang, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada
Web and System Chair
Qiwen Pan, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada
Program Committee Parallel and Distributed System Architectures
Pavan Balaji, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Kenin Coloma, AOL, USA
Dean Hildebrand, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA
Joel Koshy, Yahoo!, USA
Rob Latham, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Heshan Lin, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA
Neill Miller, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Arifa Nisar, University of California at Santa Cruz, USA
Aamod Sane, Yahoo!, USA
Saba Sehrish, Northwestern University, USA
Deepak Singh, Yahoo!, USA
Seung Son, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Vidhyashankar Venkataraman, Yahoo!, USA
Parallel and Distributed Software Technologies Henrique Andrade, Goldman Sachs, USA
Dorian Arnold, University of New Mexico, USA
Uday Bondhugula, Indian Institute of Science, India
Rajkumar Buyya, University of Melbourne, Australia
I-Hsin Chung, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, USA
Alex Iosup, TU Delft, Netherlands
Che-Rung Lee, National TsingHua University, Taiwan
Kevin Pedretti, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
David Skinner, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
Dan Tsafrir, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel
Parallel/Multicore and Distributed Algorithms and Applications David Bader, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Purushotham Bangalore, University of Alabama, USA
Surendra Byna, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA
6
Christian Engelmann, Oak Ridge National Lab, USA
Dave Goodell, Argonne National Lab, USA
Rama Govindaraju, Google, USA
Arobinda Gupta, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, India
Dinesh Kaushik, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia
Jeongnim Kim, National Center for Supercomputing Applications, USA
Amit Majumdar, San Diego Supercomputer Center, USA
Esmond Ng, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA
Kalyan Perumalla, Oak Ridge National Lab, USA
Fabrizio Petrini, IBM Research, USA
Sushil Prasad, University of Georgia, USA
Rajeev Raje, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, USA
Subhash Saini, NASA, USA
C.D. Sudheer, Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning, India
Ramesh Thirumale, Boeing, USA
Satish Vadhiyar, Indian Institute of Science, India
Robert van Engelen, Florida State University, USA
Embedded Systems
Jing Chen, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
Michael Glaß, University Erlangen-Nurember, Germany
Edmund Lai, Massey University, New Zealand
Graham Leedham, University of New England, Australia
Tan Su Lim, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Martin Lukasiewycz, Technology University of Munich, Germany
Douglas Maskell, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Alejandro Masrur, Technology University of Munich, Germany
Pramod Kumar Meher, institute for Infocomms Research, Singapore
Jogesh Muppala, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Koji Nakano, University of Hiroshima, Japan
Hamid Reza Sharifzadeh, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Zili Shao, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China
Ching-Lung Su, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Taiwan
Hiroyuki Tomiyama, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
Jiang Xu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Jason Xue, Hong Kong City University, China
Chuck Yoo, Korea University, Korea
Grid, Cluster and Cloud Computing David Abramson, Monash University, Australia
George Bosilca, University of Tennessee, USA
Michael Frumkin, Google, USA
Stéphane Genaud, Université de Strasbourg, France
Daniel Katz, University of Chicago, USA
Rainer Keller, High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart, Germany
Diwakar Krishnamurthy, University of Calgary, Canada
Alexey Lastovetsky, University College Dublin, Ireland
Paul Lu, University of Alberta, Canada
Gabriel Mateescu, National Center for Supercomputing Applications, USA
Rubén S. Montero, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
Andrew Rau-Chaplin, Dalhousie University, Canada
7
Thomas Rauber, University of Bayreuth, Germany
Cal Ribbens, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA
Morris Riedel, Jülich Supercomputing Centre, Germany
Ruth Shaw, University of New Brunswick, Canada
Douglas Thain, University of Notre Dame, USA
Paolo Trunfio, University of Calabria, Italy
Alan Wagner, University of British Columbia, Canada
Web Services and Internet Computing Nainesh Agarwal, University of Victoria, Canada
Watheq El-Kharashi, Aim Shams University, Egypt
Rafael Parra Hernandez, Eightfold Logic, Canada
Masahiro Ito, Toshiba, Japan
Xue-Mei Jiang, BULL, France
Wei Li, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Wei Lu, Keene University, USA
Kosuke Takano, Kanagawa Institute of Technology, Japan
Martine Wedlake, IBM, USA
Guowen Wu, Donghua University, China
Tomoki Yoshihisa, Osaka University, Japan
Performance Evaluation and Measurement Gabriel Antoniu, INRIA, France
Canfeng Chen, Nokia Research Center, China
Yong Chen, Texas Tech University, USA
David Expósito, University Carlos III, Spain
Franco Frattolillo, Universitá del Sannio, Italy
Karl Fuerlinger, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany
Javier García, University Carlos III, Spain
Robert Latham, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Wei-keng Liao, Nothwestern University, USA
Thomas Ludwig, University of Hamburg, Germany
Tomas Margalef, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain
Vlad Olaru, Politechnic University of Bucarest, Romania
Enrique Quintana, Universidad Jaume I, Spain
Rolf Rabenseifner, High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart, Germany
Bronis R. de Supinski, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
Manuel Ujaldon, Universidad of Málaga, Spain
Roland Wismüller, University of Siegen, Germany
Yong Zhao, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, China
Distributed Systems and Applications Henri Bal, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Arndt Bode, Technische Universität München, Germany
Laszlo Böszörmenyi, Klagenfurt University, Austria
Luc Bougé, ENS Cachan, France
Schahram Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Thomas Fahringer, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Torsten Hoefler, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Peter Kacsuk, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA SZTAKI), Hungary
Harald Kosch, University Passau, Germany
8
Frank Mueller, North Carolina State University, USA
Alexander Reinefeld, Zuse Institute Berlin, Germany
Martin Schulz, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA
Alan Sussman, University of Maryland, College Park, USA
Domenico Talia, Università della Calabria, Italy
High-Performance Scientific and Engineering Computing
Ian Foster, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Giulio Giunta, University of Napoli Parthenope, Italy
Rao Kotamarthi, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Giuliano Laccetti, University of Napoli Federico II, Italy
Marco Lapegna, University of Napoli Federico II, Italy
Sandy Liu, National Research Council Canada, Canada
Patrizio Mariani, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
Paul Messina, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
Angelo Riccio, University of Napoli Parthenope, Italy
Database Applications and Data Mining Mohsen Afsharchi, Zanjan University, Iran
Walid G. Aref, Purdue University, USA
Min-Yuh Day, Tamkang University, Taiwan
Bill Grosky, University of Michigan, USA
Hasan Jamil, Wayne State University, USA
Zeng Jia, Boston College of Medicine, USA
Mehmet Kaya, Firat University, Turkey
Richard Khoury, Lakehead University, Canada
Keivan Kian-Mehr, University of Western Ontario, Canada
Zongmin Ma, North Eastern University, China
Olfa Nasraoui, University of Louisville, USA
Michael O'Grady, University College Dublin, Ireland
Tansel Ozyer, TOBB University of Economics and Technology, Turkey
Karampelas Panagiotis, Hellenic American University, Greece
Eric Pardede, La Trobe University, Australia
Faruk Polat, Middle East Technical University, Turkey
Mick J. Ridley, University of Bradford, UK
Abdullah Uz Tanse, City University of New York, USA
Ozgur Ulusoy, Bilkent University, Turkey
Adnan Yazici, Middle East Technical University, Turkey
Ming Zhang, TeraData, USA
Xingquan (Hill) Zhu, Florida Atlantic University, USA
Biological/Molecular Computing
Srinivas Aluru, Iowa State University, USA
Eric Aubanel, University of New Brunswick, Canada
Vipin Chaudhary, SUNY Buffalo, USA
Wuchun Feng, Virginia Tech, USA
Ananth Kalyanaraman, Washington State University, USA
Kamesh Madduri, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
Bertil Schmidt, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Alexandros Stamatakis, Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies, Germany
Michela Taufer, University of Delaware, USA
9
Chau-Wen Tseng, University of Maryland, College Park, USA
Network Protocols, Routing, Algorithms Irfan Awan, University of Bradford, UK
Kaushik Chowdhury, Northeastern University, USA
Chryssis Georgiou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Shi-Jinn Horng, National Taiwan University of Science & Technology, Taiwan
Helen Karatza, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Yingshu Li, Georgia State University, USA
Jason Liu, Florida International University, USA
Sumesh Philip, Western Illinois University, USA
Cheng-Zhong Xu, Wayne State University, USA
Laurence T. Yang, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada
Si Qing Zheng, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Pervasive/Ubiquitous Computing and Intelligence Adnan Anbuky, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
Cosimo Anglano, Università del Piemonte Orientale "A. Avogadro", Italy
Jiannong Cao, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China
Eugen Dedu, University of Franche-Comté, France
Serge Chaumette, University Bordeaux 1, France
Didier El Baz, LAAS/CNRS, France
Pascal Felber, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland
Lu Liu, University of Derby, UK
Etienne Rivière, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland
Françoise Sailhan, CNAM, France
Ali Shahrabi, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK
Mobile Computing and Wireless Communications
Habib Ammari, Hofstra University, USA
Osama Bazan, Ryerson University, Canada
Shih-Yu Chang, National TsingHua University, Taiwan
Hui Chen, Virginia State University, USA
Feng-Tsun Chien, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan
Andrew Eckford, York University, Canada
Weiwei Fang, Beijing Jiaotong University, China
Shengli Fu, University of North Texas, USA
Mina Guirguis, Texas State University, USA
Abdelhakim Hafid, University of Montreal, Canada
Husheng Li, University of Tennessee at Knoxville, USA
Shiwen Mao, Auburn University, USA
Sirisha Medidi, Boise State University, USA
Mineo Takai, University of California, USA
Natalija Vlajic, York University, Canada
Weichao Wang, University of North Caroline at Charlotte, USA
Autonomic, Reliability and Fault-Tolerance Saroj Biswas, Temple University, USA
Qing Dong, Naval Research Laboratory, USA
Frank Ferrese, Naval Research Laboratory, USA
Andy Xiaolin Li, University of Florida, USA
10
Feng Li, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, USA
Steven Mastro, Naval Research Laboratory, USA
Benito Mendoza, Exxon Mobil, USA
Tod Schuck, Lockheed Martin, USA
John Sudano, Lockheed Martin, USA
Liudong Xing, University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, USA
Feiyu Xiong, Drexel University, USA
Bo Yang, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, China
Xukai Zou, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, USA
Trust, Security and Privacy
Jose M. Alcaraz Calero, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, UK
Jorge Bernal Bernabe, University of Murcia, Spain
Han-Chieh Chao, National Ilan University, Taiwan
David Fernandez, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Scott Fowler, Linköping University, Sweden
Longxiang Gao, Deakin University, Australia
Felix Gomez Marmol, NEC Laboratories Europe, Germany
Nicolai Kuntze, Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology SIT, Germany
Jorge E. Lopez de Vergara, Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain
Juan M. Marin Perez, University of Murcia, Spain
Ronald Petrlic, University of Paderborn, Germany
Kenji Saito, Keio University, Japan
Christoph Sorge, University of Paderborn, Germany
Miguel Soriano, Technical University of Catalonia, Spain
Osman Ugus, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
Victor Villagra, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Luis Javier Garcia Villalba, Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM), Spain
Fei Wang, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China
Gaocai Wang, Guangxi University, China
Guojun Wang, Central South University, China
Dirk Westhoff, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
Sherali Zeadally, University of the District of Columbia, USA
11
The 2011 IEEE International Conference on High Performance Computing and Communications (HPCC-2011)
Keynote: Green Computing in Mobile Cloud Ivan Stojmenovic, University of Ottawa, Canada
About the Keynote Speaker
Ivan Stojmenovic received his Ph.D. degree in mathematics. He held regular and visiting positions in Serbia, Japan, USA, Canada, France, Mexico, Spain, UK (as Chair in Applied Computing at the University of Birmingham), Hong Kong, Brazil, Taiwan, and China, and is Full Professor at the University of Ottawa, Canada and Adjunct Professor at the University of Novi Sad, Serbia. He published over 250 different papers, and edited seven books on wireless, ad hoc, sensor and actuator networks and applied algorithms with Wiley. He is editor of over dozen journals, editor-in-chief of IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems (from January 2010), and founder and editor-in-chief of three journals (MVLSC, IJPEDS and AHSWN). Stojmenovic is one of about 300 computer science researchers with h-index at least 40 and has >11000 citations. He received three best paper awards and the Fast Breaking Paper for October 2003, by Thomson ISI ESI. He is recipient of the Royal Society Research Merit Award, UK. He is elected to IEEE Fellow status (Communications Society, class 2008), and is IEEE CS Distinguished Visitor 2010-
12. He received Excellence in Research Award of the University of Ottawa 2009. Stojmenovic chaired and/or organized >60 workshops and conferences, and served in >200 program committees. He was program co-chair at IEEE PIMRC 2008, IEEE AINA-07, IEEE MASS-04&07, EUC-05&08-10, AdHocNow08, IFIP WSAN08, WONS-05, MSN-05&06, ISPA-05&07, founded workshop series at IEEE MASS, ICDCS, DCOSS, WoWMoM, ACM Mobihoc, IEEE/ACM CPSCom, FCST, MSN, and is/was Workshop Chair at IEEE INFOCOM 2011, IEEE MASS-09, ACM Mobihoc-07&08.
Summary: Cloud computing and green computing came to be hot topics in recent years, especially in data center networks.
As the development of smart phones and tablets, the combination between mobile devices and cloud computing,
named by mobile cloud, has emerged as a new cloud computing platform, bringing new challenges to cloud and
green computing. One of the most important issues is how to optimize the scheduling and transport schemes for
mobile devices to achieve energy saving.
This talk will first introduce the development of mobile cloud computing. Next, it will present the new challenges of
green computing in mobile cloud; especially highlight the uniqueness, compared with the study on the energy
saving problem in wireless networking. It will also discuss the possible solutions from various perspectives,
including task scheduling, access management, transport mechanisms and application optimization. One
particular emerging concept is the ‘vehicular cloud’. For example, traffic lights in a congested area could be
rescheduled by the municipality running the rescheduling code on the collective computational platform provided
by the cars.
12
UIC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees
Honorary Chair
Stephen S. Yau, Arizona State University, USA
General Chairs
M. Jamal Deen, McMaster University, Canada Witold Pedrycz, University of Alberta, Canada Ying Zhang, Palo Alto Research Center, USA
Program Chairs
Robert C. Hsu, Chung Hua University, Taiwan Torben Weis, University of Duisburg, Germany Woontack Woo, GIST, Korea
Program Vice-Chairs
Ren-Hung Hwang, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan Minkyong Kim, IBM, USA
Workshop Chairs
Bernady O. Apduhan, Kyushu Sangyo University, Japan Waltenegus Dargie, Technical University of Dresden, Germany
Advisory Committee
Sumi Helal (Chair), University of Florida, USA Norio Shiratori, Tohoku University, Japan Jeffrey J.P. Tsai, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Mohan Kumar, University of Texas at Arlington, USA Max Muehlhaeuser, Darmstadt University of Technology, Germany Yuanchun Shi, Tsinghua University, China Zhaohui Wu, Zhejiang University, China Xingshe Zhou, Northwest Polytechnic University, China Ahhwee Tan, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Christian Becker, University of Mannheim, Germany
Steering Committee
Jianhua Ma (chair), Hosei University, Japan Laurence T. Yang (chair), St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Hai Jin, Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China Theo Ungerer, University of Augsburg, Germany Jadwiga Indulska, University of Queensland, Australia Daqing Zhang, Institute TELECOM SudParis, France
Publicity Chairs
Carlos Westphall, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Wenbin Jiang, Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China Damien Sauveron, University of Limoges, France Xingang Liu, Yonsei University, Korea Mianxiong Dong, University of Aizu, Japan Chao Chen, University of Florida, USA Jiehan Zhou, University of Oulu, Finland Agustinus Borgy Waluyo, Monash University, Australia Senol Z. Erdogan, Maltepe University, Turkey Weiwei Fang, Beijing Jiaotong University, China Xu Li, University of Waterloo, Canada
Panel Chairs
Daqing Zhang, Institute TELECOM SudParis, France
13
Ramiro Liscano, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada
Demo/Exhibition Chairs
Gang Pan, Zhejiang University, China Itiro Siio, Ochanomizu University, Japan
Award Chairs
Judith Symonds, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Jong Hyuk Park, Kyungnam University, Korea
Special Track Chairs
Zheng Yan, Nokia Research Center, Finland Yan Wang, Macquarie University, Australia
International Liaison Chairs
Bessam Abdulrazak, University Sherbrooke, Canada Frode Eika Sandnes, Oslo University College, Norway Marius Portmann, University of Queensland, Australia Jiannong Cao, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, HK Yo-Ping Huang, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan
Industrial Liaison Chairs
Nagula Sangary, RIM, Canada Alvin Chin, Nokia Research Centre Beijing, China
Local Chairs
Andy Yongwen Pan, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Alice Ying Huang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Shizheng Jiang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Web Chair
Chunsheng Zhu, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Program Committee
Rafael 'Tico' Ballagas, Nokia Research, USA Martin Bauer, NEC Laboratories Europe, Germany Rachid Benamri, Lakehead University, Canada Neil Bergmann, University of Queensland, Australia Miriam Capretz, University of Western Ontario, Canada Lin-huang Chang, National Taichung University, Taiwan Yue-Shan Chang, National Taipei University, Taiwan Alvin Chin, Nokia Research Center Beijing, China Chih-Hsun Chou, Chung Hua University, Taiwan Antonio Coronato, ICAR-CNR, Italy Babak Esfandiari, Carleton University, Canada Dingyi Fang, Northwest University, China Raghu K. Ganti, IBM T.J. Watson Research, USA Jinhua Guo, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA Song Guo, University of Aizu, Japan Jessica Heesen, Tubingen University, Germany Didier Hoareau, University of La Réunion, France Hui-Huang Hsu, Tamkang University, Taiwan Peizhao Hu, NICTA, Australia Chung-Ming Huang, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Runhe Huang, Hosei University, Japan Yo-Ping Huang, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan Yu Huang, Nanjing University, China Fuyuki Ishikawa, National Institute of Informatics, Japan Beihong Jin, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Yasuharu Katsuno, IBM Research-Tokyo, Japan
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Sehwan Kim, WorldViz, USA Youngho Lee, Mokpo National University, Korea Vili Lehdonvirta, University of Tokyo, Japan & Helsinki Institute for Information Technology, Finland Shijian Li, Zhejiang University, China Chiu Kuo Liang, Chung Hua University, Taiwan Chun-Yuan Lin, Chang Gung University, Taiwan Rene Meier, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Kazuhiro Minami, National Institute of Informatics, Japan Yoosoo Oh, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea Susanna Pirttikangas, University of Oulu, Finland Choonsung Shin, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Lei Shu, Osaka University, Japan Francois Siewe, De Montfort University, UK Stephan Sigg, National Institute of Informatics, Japan Chiu C. Tan, Temple University, USA Yan Tang, Vrije University Brussel, Belgium Jilei Tian, Nokia Research Center, China Jean-Yves Tigli, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France Athanasios Vasilakos, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Chun-Hsin Wang, Chung Hua University, Taiwan Hao Wang, Nokia Research Center, China Sheng-De Wang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Yi Wang, Hunan University, China Yufeng Wang, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, China Zhijun Wang, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China Woontack Woo, GIST, Korea I-Chen Wu, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan Hirozumi Yamaguchi, Osaka University, Japan Chao-Tung Yang, Tunghai University, Taiwan Li-Hsing Yen, National University of Kaohsiung, Taiwan Tomoko Yonezawa, ATR, Japan Yu Zheng, Microsoft Research Asia, China Jiehan Zhou, University of Oulu, Finland
15
The 8th International Conference on Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing
(UIC-2011)
Keynote: Internet of Things and Cloud Computing for Future Internet Han-Chieh Chao, National Ilan University, Taiwan
About the Keynote Speaker Han-Chieh Chao is a joint appointed Full Professor of the Department of Electronic Engineering and Institute of Computer Science & Information Engineering where also serves as the president of National Ilan University, I-Lan, Taiwan, R.O.C. He has been appointed as the Director of the Computer Center for Ministry of Education starting from September 2008 to July 2010. His research interests include High Speed Networks, Wireless Networks, IPv6 based Networks, Digital Creative Arts and Digital Divide. He received his MS and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in 1989 and 1993 respectively. He has authored or co-authored 4 books and has published about 280 refereed professional research papers. He has completed 100 MSEE thesis students and 3 PhD students. Dr. Chao has received many research awards, including Purdue University SRC awards, and NSC research awards (National Science Council of Taiwan). He also received many funded research grants from NSC, Ministry of Education (MOE), RDEC, Industrial Technology of Research Institute, Institute of Information
Industry and FarEasTone Telecommunications Lab. Dr. Chao has been invited frequently to give talks at national and international conferences and research organizations. Dr. Chao is the Editor-in-Chief for IET Communications, Journal of Internet Technology, International Journal of Internet Protocol Technology and International Journal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing. Dr. Chao has served as the guest editors for Mobile Networking and Applications (ACM MONET), IEEE JSAC, IEEE Communications Magazine, Computer Communications, IEE Proceedings Communications, the Computer Journal, Telecommunication Systems, Wireless Personal Communications, and Wireless Communications & Mobile Computing. Dr. Chao is an IEEE senior member and a Fellow of IET (IEE). He is a Chartered Fellow of British Computer Society.
Summary:
In recent years, Internet of Things (IoT) and Cloud Computing are the hottest issues of Future Internet. The IoT is the most important concept of Future Internet for providing a common global IT Platform to combine seamless networks and networked things. Cloud Computing provides backend solution for processing huge data streams and computations while facing the challenges of everything will be connected with seamless networks in the future. However, there is a lack of common fabric for integrating IoT and Cloud. In telecommunications, the IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem) based on the All-IP and Open Services Architecture has been regarded as the trend for Next Generation Network (NGN). We believe that the IMS communication platform is the most suitable fabric for integrating IoT and Cloud. In this study, we will provide the discussion of open challenges and possible solutions for Future Internet.
16
The 8th International Conference on Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing
(UIC-2011)
Keynote: Networking of Vehicles - Applications, Challenges and Some Recent Results
Victor C.M. Leung, University of British Columbia, Canada
About the Keynote Speaker
Victor C. M. Leung received the B.A.Sc. (Hons.) degree in electrical engineering from the University of British Columbia (U.B.C.) in 1977, and was awarded the APEBC Gold Medal as the head of the graduating class in the Faculty of Applied Science. He attended graduate school at U.B.C. on a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Postgraduate Scholarship and completed the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering in 1981. From 1981 to 1987, Dr. Leung was a Senior Member of Technical Staff at MPR Teltech Ltd., specializing in the planning, design and analysis of satellite communication systems. In 1988, he was a Lecturer in the Department of Electronics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He returned to U.B.C. as a faculty member in 1989, where he is currently a Professor and holder of the TELUS Mobility Research Chair in Advanced Telecommunications Engineering in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He is a member of the Institute for Computing, Information and Cognitive Systems at U.B.C. He also holds adjunct/guest appointments at Jilin University, Beijing Jiaotong University, South China University of Technology, the Hong Kong Polytechnic
University and Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications. Dr. Leung has co-authored more than 500 technical papers in international journals and conference proceedings, and several of these papers had been selected for best paper awards. His research interests are in the areas of architectural and protocol design, management algorithms and performance analysis for computer and telecommunication networks, with a current focus on wireless networks and mobile systems. Dr. Leung is a registered professional engineer in the Province of British Columbia, Canada. He is a Fellow of IEEE, a Fellow of the Engineering Institute of Canada, and a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering. He is a Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Communications Society. He has served on the editorial boards of the IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications - Wireless Communications Series, the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications and the IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, and is serving on the editorial boards of the IEEE Transactions on Computers, the Journal of Communications and Networks, Computer Communications, as well as several other journals. He has guest-edited several journal special issues, and served on the technical program committee of numerous international conferences. He is a General Co-chair of CSA 2011, Chinacom 2011, and MobiWorld and GCN Workshops at IEEE Infocom 2011. He chaired the TPC of the wireless networking and cognitive radio track in IEEE VTC-fall 2008. He was the General Chair of AdhocNets 2010, WC 2010, QShine 2007, and Symposium Chair for Next Generation Mobile Networks in IWCMC 2006-2008. He was a General Co-chair of BodyNets 2010, CWCN Workshop at Infocom 2010, ASIT Workshop at IEEE Globecom 2010, MobiWorld Workshop at IEEE CCNC 2010, IEEE EUC 2009 and ACM MSWiM 2006, and a TPC Vice-chair of IEEE WCNC 2005.
Summary: Recent advances in wireless communication technologies are making it possible for automobiles to be integrated into the global network. Intelligent Transportation Systems with vehicles in the loop are expected to significantly improve road safety, reduce traffic congestion and cut greenhouse gas emissions. This is made possible in the USA by Dedicated Short Range Communications (DSRC), which employs the IEEE 802.11p standard over the 75MHz of spectrum in the 5.9 GHz band allocated by the FCC for vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communications. DSRC is expected to revolutionize road transportation by making possible many real-time safety applications. However, global deployment of DSRC is not expected to materialize in the near term due to regulatory and financial challenges. In the meantime, vehicles and their passengers are increasingly equipped with different forms of wireless networking capabilities, e.g., cellular, WiFi and WiMAX. Thus there is also a growing interest in supporting applications like infotainment, travel advisory, route planning, etc., using heterogeneous wireless networks. In this presentation, I shall describe several applications that leverage the wireless communications to put vehicles in the loop. Different applicants impose different requirements on the wireless network for data routing, transfer latency, etc. I shall review the technical challenges that need to be overcome to meet some of these requirements, and describe solutions developed in our recent research to meet these challenges. I shall conclude the presentation by discussing some future research directions.
17
ATC 2011 Organizing and Program Committees
Honorary Chair
Christian Mϋller -Schloer, University of Hannover, Germany
General Chair
Mazin Yousif, IBM, Canada Manish Parashar, Rutgers University, USA Gero Mühl, University of Rostock, Germany
Program Chairs
Andy Xiaolin Li, University of Florida, USA Yan Wang, Macquarie University, Australia Jörg Hähner, University of Hannover, Germany
Program Vice-Chairs
Felix Gomez Marmol, NEC Europe, Germany Jose M. Alcaraz Calero, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, UK Luis Javier García Villalba, Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM), Spain
Workshop Chairs
Xiaodong Lin, University of Ontario Institution of Technology, Canada Naixue Xiong, Georgia State University, USA
Advisory Committee
Hartmut Schmeck (Chair), Karlsruhe Institution of Technology, Germany USA Jeffrey J.P. Tsai, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Tharam Dillon, Curtin University of Technology, Australia Chin-Chen Chang, Feng Chia University, Taiwan Jean Camp, Indiana University, USA Jurgen Branke, University of Warwick, UK Raouf Boutaba, University of Waterloo, Canada Wolfgang Reif, University of Augsburg, Germany Zhong Chen, Peking University, China Tadashi Dohi, Hiroshima University, Japan
Steering Committee
Jianhua Ma (chair), Hosei University, Japan Laurence T. Yang (chair), St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Hai Jin, Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China Theo Ungerer, University of Augsburg, Germany Jadwiga Indulska, University of Queensland, Australia Daqing Zhang, Institute TELECOM SudParis, France
Publicity Chairs
Carlos Westphall, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Wenbin Jiang, Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China Damien Sauveron, University of Limoges, France Xingang Liu, Yonsei University, Korea Mianxiong Dong, University of Aizu, Japan Chao Chen, University of Florida, USA Jiehan Zhou, University of Oulu, Finland Agustinus Borgy Waluyo, Monash University, Australia Senol Z. Erdogan, Maltepe University, Turkey
Panel Chairs
Zhen Liu, Nokia Research Center, China
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Srinivas Sampalli, Dalhousie University, Canada
Award Chairs
Chunming Rong, University of Stavanger, Norway Sajid Hussain, Fisk University, USA
International Liaison Chairs
Juan Gonzalez Nieto, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Zhong Chen, Peking University, China Junzhou Luo, Southeast University, Nanjing Roy Sterritt, University of Ulster at Jordanstown, UK Bin Xiao, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, HK Hui-Huang Hsu, Tamkang University, Taiwan
Industrial Liaison Chairs
Nagula Sangary, RIM, Canada Martin Gilje Jaatun, SINTEF, Norway
Local Chairs
Andy Yongwen Pan, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Alice Ying Huang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Shizheng Jiang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Web Chair
Chunsheng Zhu, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Program Committee
Mohamed Ahmed, University College of London, UK Dave Bakken, Washington State University, USA Patricia Arias Cabarcos, University Carlos III, Spain Julio César Hernández-Castro, University of Portsmouth, UK Alva L. Couch, Tufts University, USA Nigel Edwards, Hewlett-Packard Lab, UK M. Carmen Fernandez Gago, University of Malaga, Spain Antonio Maña Gomez, University of Malaga, Spain Luis Miguel Vaquero Gonzalez, Telefonica I+D, Spain Nathan Griffiths, University of Warwich, UK Jinhua Guo, University of Michigan at Dearborn, USA Peter Gutman, University of Auckland, New Zealand Sy-Yen Kuo, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Miroslaw Kutylowski, Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland Mario Lischka, NEC Laboratories Europe, Germany Jorge Lobo, IBM Research, USA Esteban Egea Lopez, Polytechnic University of Cartagena, Spain Pedro Peris-López, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Fermin Galán Márquez, Telefonica I+D, Spain Florina Almenarez Mendoza, University Carlos III, Spain Martin Middendorf, University of Leipzig, Germany Marco Cassassa Mont, Hewlett-Packard Lab, UK Frank Ormeier, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Germany Manuel Gil Perez, University of Murcia, Spain Ronald Petrlic, University of Paderborn, Germany Andrea di Pietro, University of Pisa, Italy María Naya-Plasencia, FNHW, Switzerland Ruben Rios del Pozo, University of Malaga, Spain Dhiraj K. Pradhan, University of Bristol, UK Jason Reid, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Isaac Agudo Ruiz, University of Malaga, Spain Khaled Hamed Salah, Khalifa University of Science, Arab Emiratesm Martin Serrano, Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland Kuei-Ping Shih, Tamkang University, Taiwan
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Christoph Sorge, University of Paderborn, Germany Stella Spagna, University of Pisa, Italy Juan E. Tapiador, University of York, UK Juergen Teich, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Fatih Turkmen, University of Trent, Italy Osman Ugus, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany Theo Ungerer, University of Augsburg, Germany Guilin Wang, University of Wollongong, Australia Huaxiong Wang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Jun Wei, Insitiute of software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Dirk Westhoff, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany Rolf Würz, University of Bochum, Germany Dong Xiang, Tsinghua University, China Yang Xiang, Deakin University, Australia Zheng Yan, Aalto University, Finland Baoliu Ye, Nanjing University, China Lu Zhang, Peking University, China Huanyu Zhao, Oklahoma State University, USA Deqing Zou, Huazhong University of Science & Technology, China
20
The 8th International Conference on Autonomic and Trusted Computing
(ATC-2011)
Keynote: Enhancing OpenID through a Reputation Framework Gregorio Martinez, University of Murcia, Spain
About the Keynote Speaker
Gregorio Martinez received a M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science at the University of Murcia (Spain). In 1997 he started to work in the Computer Service of the same University on various projects related to security and networking. In 1999 he started as research staff in the Department of Information and Communications Engineering of the University of Murcia. In 2001 and 2007, he was appointed lecturer and associate professor in the same department, respectively. Recently he has been approved for promotion as a full professor. His scientific activity is mainly devoted to security and the distributed management of IP based communications networks. He is also working on open source models and real-time and critical applications and systems. He is working on different national and European IST research projects related to these topics. As part of these projects he is collaborating with different universities, companies and research centers across Europe. He has been doing several research staying (as visiting professor) in the Department of Computer Science of the
University College London (UCL-CS) and the Département Informatique et Réseaux of the École Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications(ENST-INFRES) in Paris. He has published more than 100 papers in national and international conference proceedings, magazines and journals. Dr. Martinez has been guest editing several special issues in different journals and magazines. He is member of the editorial board of 11 journals and member of the review board of more than 20 high level journals and magazines.
Summary:
OpenID is an open standard providing a decentralised authentication mechanism to end users. It is based on a unique URL (Uniform Resource Locator) or XRI (Extensible Resource Identifier) as identifier of the user. This fact of using a single identifier confers this approach an interesting added-value when users want to get access to different services in the Internet, since users do not need to create a new account on every website they are visiting. However, OpenID providers are usually also being used as a point to store certain personal attributes of the end users, which might be of interest for any service provider willing to make profit from collecting that personal information. The definition of a reputation management solution integrated as part of the OpenID protocol can help users to determine whether certain service provider is more or less reliable before interacting with it and transferring their private information. In this talk the definition of a reputation framework that can be applied to the OpenID SSO (Single Sign-On) standard solution will be provided. It will be also described how the protocol itself can be enhanced so OpenID providers can collect (and provide) recommendations from (to) users regarding different service providers and thus enhancing the users' experience when using OpenID.
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FTDCS 2011 Organizing and Program Committees
General Chair
Krishna Kant, National Science Foundation, USA
Program Chair
Yaw-Chung Chen, National Chiao-Tung University, Taiwan
Local Chairs
Andy Yongwen Pan, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Alice Ying Huang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada Shizheng Jiang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Web and System Chair
Shizheng Jiang, St Francis Xavier University, Canada
Steering Committee
Stephen S. Yau, Arizona State University, USA Kane Kim, University of California, Irvine, USA Kinji Mori, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Radu Popscu-Zeletin, University of Berlin and FOCUS, Germany
Program Committee
Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed, Marquette University, USA Gail-Joon Ahn, Arizona State University, USA Doo-Hwan Bae, KAIST, Korea Cheng-Fu Chou, National Taiwan University, Taiwan William Chu, Tunghai University, Taiwan Maria Luisa Damiani, University of Milan, Italy Zhi Jin, Peking University, China Emery Jou, Institute for Information Industry, Taiwan Fariaz Karim, Intel, USA Martin Lasak, Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany Yao-Nan Lien, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Heather R. Lipford, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA Huan Liu, Arizona State University, USA Supratik Mukhopadhyay, Louisiana State University, USA Stephan Steglich, Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany Kenichi Takahashi, Tottori University, Japan Juan Wang, Wuhan University, China Baowen Xu, Nanking University, China Laurence T. Yang, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada Keunhyuk Yeom, Pusan National University, Korea
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The 13th IEEE International Workshop on Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems (FTDCS-2011)
Keynote: Smart Phones, Mobile Applications andClouds in Foreign Wars
Jeffrey Voas, National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA
About the Keynote Speaker
Jeffrey Voas is a computer scientist at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Before joining NIST, Voas was an entrepreneur and co-founded Cigital in 1992. After 13 years at Cigital, Voas accepted a director position at Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) and was named an SAIC Technical Fellow from 2005 to 2009. He has served as the IEEE Reliability Society President in 2003-2005 and 2009-2010, and serves as the IEEE Computer Society's Second Vice President in 2010. Voas is the Director of the IEEE Division VI* in 2011 - 2012. Voas co-authored two John Wiley books: Software Assessment: Reliability, Safety, and Testability in 1995 and Software Fault Injection: Inoculating Software Against Errors in 1998, is currently an Associate Editor-In-Chief of IEEE's IT Professional magazine, and is on the editorial board of IEEE Computer Magazine. He was one of two people named IEEE Reliability Engineer of the Year in 2000. He received two U.S. patents and has over
170 publications. Voas received his undergraduate degree in computer engineering from Tulane University in 1985), and received his M.S. and Ph.D. in computer science from the College of William and Mary in 1986 and 1990, respectively. Voas performed a two-year post-doc for the National Research Council from 1990 to1992. He is a Fellow of the IEEE. *IEEE Division VI consists of the following IEEE societies and council: Education Society, Industrial Electronics Society, Product Safety Engineering Society, Professional Communication Society, Reliability Society, Society on Social Implications of Technology and Technology Management Council.
Summary: Recent advances in the hardware capabilities of mobile hand-held devices have fostered the development of open source operating systems for mobile phones. This new generation of smart phones, such as iPhone and Google Android, are powerful enough to accomplish most of the tasks previously requiring at least a personal computer. This keynote will discuss the cyber threats that stem from these new smart device capabilities and the online application market for mobile devices including malware, data exfiltration, exploitation through USB, and user and data tracking. This keynote will also include the discussion of our ongoing research to defend against or mitigate the impact of attacks against mobile devices by analyzing the source code and binaries of mobile applications, hardening the Android Kernel, using kernel network and data encryption, and controlling the communication mechanism for synchronizing the user contents with computers and other phones. The enhanced difficulties in dealing with these security issues when the end-goal is to deploy security-enhanced smart phones into military combat settings will also be explained.
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The HPCC 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 HPCC 1
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 HPCC 2
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 HPCC 3
17:30-19:30 Reception
HPCC 1: System Architectures I Session Chair: Youngjin Nam, University of Minnesota, USA
1. Distributed Caching Strategies in Peer-to-Peer Systems Guoqiang Gao, Ruixuan Li, Weijun Xiao, Zhiyong Xu 2. Unleash your Memory-Constrained Applications: A 32-Node Non-coherent Distributed-Memory
Prototype Cluster Héctor Montaner, Federico Silla, Holger Fröning, José Duato 3. A Power-Aware Based Storage Architecture for High Performance Computing Laura Prada, Javier Garcia, J. Daniel Garcia, Jesύs Carretero, Alberto Nuñez 4. A Distributed Reconfigurable Active SSD Platform for Data Intensive Applications Noor Abbani, Ali Ali, Doa'A Al Otoom, Mohamad Jomaa, Mageda Sharafeddine, Hassan Artail,
Haitham Akkary, Mazen A.R. Saghir, Mariette Awad, Hazem Hajj
HPCC 2: System Architectures II Session Chair: Ramesh K. Karne, Towson University, USA
1. A Parallel Processing Scheme for Large-Size Sliding-Window Applications Weixia Xu, Jinbo Xu, Zhengbin Pang 2. C-Switches: Increasing Switch Radix with Current Integration Scale
Juan A. Villar, Francisco J. Andujar, José L. Sánchez, Francisco J. Alfaro, José Duato 3. Algebraic Models for the Cube Connected Cycles and Shuffle Exchange Graphs Meghanad Wagh, Khadidja Bendjilali 4. A High-Performance and Energy-Efficient Virtually Tagged Stack Cache Architecture for Multi-Core
Environments Suk chan Kang, Chrysostomos Nicopoulos, Hyunggyu Lee, Jongman Kim 5. Mini Web Server Clusters for HTTP Request Splitting Bharat Rawal, Ramesh Karne, Alexander L Wijesinha
HPCC 3: Multicore Systems Session Chair: Thomas Rauber, University of Bayreuth, Germany
1. ESHMP: A Stall-Time-Based Scheduling for Performance Heterogeneous Multicore Systems Pengcheng Nie, Zhenhua Duan
2. Stable Adaptive Work-Stealing for Concurrent Multi-core Runtime Systems Yangjie Cao, Hongyang Sun, Depei Qian, Weiguo Wu
3. Rule Pattern Parallelization of Packet Filters on Muti-Core Environments Yoshiyuki Yamashita, Masato Tsuru
4. Memory-Intensive Applications on a Many-Core Processor Matthias Korch, Thomas Rauber, Carsten Scholtes
5. Using the Stream Control Transmission Protocol and Multi-Core Processors to Improve the Performance of Web Servers Vlad Olaru, Mugurel Andreica, Nicolae Tapus
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HPCC 2011 Panel
Title: Evaluation of High-Performance Computing Systems: How Well Are We Doing? Chair: J. Nelson Amaral, University of Alberta, Canada Panelists: Justin Shi, Temple University, USA Robert van Engelen, Florida State University, USA Abhinav Bhatele, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA Brian W. Unger, University of Calgary, Canada
Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 HPCC 4
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 HPCC 5
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
HPCC 4: Embedded Systems Session Chair: Michela Taufer, University of Delaware, USA
1. An Energy-Efficient Real-Time Scheduling Algorithm for Sporadic Task Set in Multiprocessor Systems Dong-Song Zhang, Fang-Yuan Chen, Shi-Yao Jin, De-Ke Guo
2. Optimal Speed Scaling Algorithms under Speed Change Constraints Zhi Zhang, Fei Li, Hakan Aydin
3. Providing Quality of Science in Volunteer Computing Trilce Estrada, Michela Taufer
HPCC 5: Wireless Networks Session Chair: Robert van Engelen, Florida State University, USA
1. Distributed Lifetime Optimization in Wireless Sensor Networks Jacques M. Bahi, Mohammed Haddad, Mourad Hakem, Hamamache Kheddouci
2. An Enhanced TCP Scheme for Distinguishing Non-congestion Losses from Packet Reordering over Wireless Mesh Networks S. Prasanthi, Sang-Hwa Chung, Won-Suk Kim
3. Improving Network Lifetime for Wireless Sensor Network using Compressive Sensing Guangming Cao, Fengqi Yu, Baoli Zhang
4. A Novel Optimized Scheduler to Provide QoS for Video IP Telephony over Wireless Networks Sushil Dutt, Iftekhar Ahmad, Daryoush Habibi
5. Improving Throughput and Reliability of Distributed Scienitific Workflows for Streaming Data Processing
Yi Gu, Qishi Wu, Xin Liu, Dantong Yu
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Sunday, September 4, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer)
09:45-10:45 HPCC 6 HPCC7
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 HPCC 8 HPCC 9
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 HPCC 10 HPCC 11
14.45-16:00 HPCC 12 HPCC 13 HPCC 14
HPCC 6: Performance Evaluation and Measurement I Session Chair: Amiya Nayak, University of Ottawa, Canada
1. Methods for Emulation of Multi-Core CPU Performance Tomasz Buchert, Lucas Nussbaum, Jens Gustedt
2. Achieving Performance and Availability Guarantees with Spot Instances Michele Mazzucco, Marlon Dumas
3. Including the Workload Effect in the Parallel Program Signature Javier Martinez Canillas, Alvaro Wong, Dolores Rexachs, Emilio Luquel
HPCC 7: Performance Evaluation and Measurement II Session Chair: Masato Tsuru, Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan
1. Accelerating the Extraction of Representative Behaviors of Programs with Dynamic Binary Translation Tianlei Zhao, Jiang Jiang, Guitao Fu, Shubo Qi, Xiaomin Jia, Minxuan Zhang
2. Asking for Performance: Exploiting Developer Intuition to Guide Instrumentation with TimeTrial Joseph M. Lancaster, Joseph G. Wingbermuehle, and Roger D. Chamberlain
3. Performance Analysis of CFD Application Cart3D Using MPInside and Performance Monitor Unit Data on Nehalem and Westmere Based Supercomputers Subhash Saini, Piyush Mehrotra, Kenichi Taylor, Michael Aftosmis, Rupak Biswas
HPCC 8: Scheduling, Services and Reliability Session Chair: Reda Alhajj, University of Calgary, Canada
1. An Effective Dynamic Scheduling Runtime and Tuning System for Heterogeneous Multi and Many-Core Desktop Platforms Alécio P. D. Binotto, Carlos E. Pereira, Arjan Kuijper, André Stork, and Dieter W. Fellner
2. On the Social aspects of Personalized Ranking for Web Services M. Omair Shafiq, Reda Alhajj, and Jon Rokne
3. A Parallel Irregular Wavefront Algorithm for Importance Sampling of Probabilistic Networks on GPU Haohai Yu, Robert van Engelen
4. Parallel Compression Checkpointing for Socket-Level Heterogeneous Systems Yongpeng Liu, Hong Zhu, Yongyan Liu, Feng Wang, Baohua Fan
5. Supporting Strong Reliability for Distributed Complex Event Processing Systems Marco Völz, Boris Koldehofe, Kurt Rothermel
HPCC 9: Scientific and Engineering Computing I Session Chair: Ruppa Thulasiram, University of Manitoba, Canada
1. GPU Acceleration for GRAPES Meteorological Model Zhuowei Wang, Xianbin Xu, Naixue Xiong, Laurence T. Yang, Wuqing Zhao
2. Online Fault and Anomaly Detection for Large-Scale Scientific Workflows Taghrid Samak, Dan Gunter, Ewa Deelman, Gideon Juve, Gaurang Mehta, Fabio Silva, Karan Vahi
3. The NEMO Oceanic Model: Computational Performance Analysis and Optimization Italo Epicoco, Silvia Mocavero, Giovanni Aloisio
4. Parallel Aspects of OpenFOAM with Large Eddy Simulations Orlando Rivera, Karl Fuerlinger
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HPCC 10: Distributed Systems and Applications Session Chair: Alecio Binotto, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil
1. MEMSCALE™: A Scalable Environment for Databases
Héctor Montaner, Federico Silla, Holger Fröning, José Duato 2. Efficient and Distributed Rule Placement in Heavy Constraint-Driven Event Systems
Björn Schilling, Boris Koldehofe, Kurt Rothermel 3. Cooperative Federated Control with Application to Tracking Control
Frank Ferrese, Qing Dong, Kristen Bradshaw, Stephen Chaves, Saroj Biswas, Li Bai
HPCC 11: Scientific and Engineering Computing II Session Chair: Gudula Rünger, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
1. A Partitioning Algorithm for Parallel Sorting on Distributed Memory Systems Michael Hofmann, Gudula Rünger
2. Social Network Analysis in Software Testing to Categorize Unit Test Cases Based on Coverage Information Negar Koochakzadeh, Reda Alhajj
3. Parallel Lattice Basis Reduction - The Road to Many-Core Werner Backes, Susanne Wetzel
4. Towards Network-Aware Divisible Load Theory for Optical Grids Mohamed Abouelela, Mohamed El-Darieby
HPCC 12: Grid, Cluster and Cloud Computing I Session Chair: Xiao Su, San Jose State University, USA
1. An RMS Architecture for Efficiently Supporting Complex-Moldable Applications Cristian Klein, Christian Pérez
2. Scalable Java Communication Middle ware for Hybrid Shared/Distributed Memory Architectures Sabela Ramos, Guillermo L. Taboada, Juan Touriño, Ramón Doallo
3. SOLARE: Self-Organizing Latency-Aware Resource Ensemble Heungsik Eom, David Wolinsky, Renato Figueiredo
4. Delay-Tolerant Dynamic Load Balancing Nader Mohamed, Jameela Al-Jaroodi
HPCC 13 : Grid, Cluster and Cloud Computing II Session Chair: Julien Bourgeois, University of Franche-Comte, France
1. Maximum Capacity of Heterogeneous P2P Multimedia Streaming Network Mingfeng Tan, Xiao Su
2. Extending executability of applications on varied target platforms Julien Bourgeois, Vaidy Sunderam, Jaroslaw Slawinski, Bogdan Cornea
3. A Framework for Automated Learning of Application Memory Usage Behaviour Tanvire Elahi, Cameron Kiddle, Rob Simmonds
4. A Priority-Type Resource Allocation Approach in Cluster Computing
Kaiqi Xiong, Kyoung-Don Kang, Xiao Chen 5. Resource Provisioning Policies to increase IaaS Provider's Profit in a Federated Cloud Environment
Adel Nadjaran Toosi, Rodrigo N. Calheiros, Ruppa K. Thulasiram, Rajkumar Buyya
HPCC 14 : GPU Computing Session Chair: Kristen Bradshaw, NSWCCD Philadelphia, USA
1. Blocked All-Pairs Shortest Paths Algorithm for Hybrid CPU-GPU System Kazuya Matsumoto, Naohito Nakasato, Stanislav Sedukhin 2. GPU-Euler: Sequence Assembly using GPGPU
Syed Faraz Mahmood, Huzefa Rangwala 3. True Random Number Generator Using GPUs and Histogram Equalization Techniques
Jose J. Mijares Chan, Bhanu Sharma, Jiaqing Lv, Gabriel Thomas, Ruppa Thulasiram, Parimala Thulasiraman
4. Multi GPU Implementation of the Simplex Algorithm Mohamed Esseghir lalami, Didier El-Baz, Vincent Boyer
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The UIC 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 UIC 1
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 UIC 2
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC 3
17:30-19:30 Reception
UIC 1: Smart Objects and Environments Session Chair: Ren-Hung Hwang, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
1. An Efficient Earthquake Early Warning Message Delivery Algorithm using an in Time Control-Theoretic Approach Ting-Yun Chi, Chun-Hao Chen, Han-Chieh Chao, Sy-Yen Kuo
2. Intelligent Toilet System for Health Screening Thomas Schlebusch, Steffen Leonhardt
3. Punishment or Reward: It Is a Problem in Anonymous, Dynamic and Autonomous Networking Environments Yufeng Wang, Athanasios V. Vasilakos, and Jianhua Ma
4. Event.Hub: An Event-Driven Information Hub for Mobile Devices Adrian Hornsby and Tapani Leppanen
UIC 2: Mobile Computing and Services Session Chair: Yufeng Wang, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, China
1. NuNote: An Augmented Reality Social Note Posting Service Chun-Yi Lin, Cheng-Ting Chang, Meng-Tsen Chen, Shih-Yung Juan, Alan Hsueh, Yi-Yang Chang, Ren-Hung Hwang
2. A Context-aware Seamless Handover Mechanism for Mass Rapid Transit System Hung-Yi Teng, Ren-Hung Hwang, Chang-Fu Tsai
3. Probabilistic Path Selection in Mobile Wireless Sensor Networks for Stochastic Events Detection Xiwei Zhang and Jia Yu
4. Participatory Road Condition Monitoring Using Mobile Phones Mikko Perttunen, Oleksiy Mazhelis, Fengyu Cong, Mikko Kauppila, Teemu Lepp anen, Jouni Kantola, Jussi Collin, Susanna Pirttikangas, Janne Haverinen, Tapani Ristaniemi, and Jukka Riekki
5. Dynamic Resource Management for a Cell-Based Distributed Mobile Computing Environment Sung Il Kim, Jae Young Jun, Jong-Kook Kim, Kyung-Chan Lee, Gyu Seong Kang, Taek-Soo Kim, Hee Kyoung Moon, Hye Chan Yoon, Hyungmin Kim, and Sang Hoon Lee
UIC 3: Wireless Sensor Networks Session Chair: Thomas Schlebusch, RWTH Aachen, Germany
1. An Application of the Wireless Sensor Network Technology to Foehn Monitoring in Real Time Chih-Yang Tsai, Yu-Fan Chen, Hsu-Cheng Lu, Chi-Hung Lin, Jyh-Cherng Shieh, Chung-Wei Yen, Jeng-Lung Huang, Yung-Shun Lin, Ching-Lu Hsieh, and Joe-Air Jiang
2. uFlow: Dynamic Software Updating in Wireless Sensor Networks Ting-Yun Chi, Wei-Cheng Wang, and Sy-Yen Kuo
3. Energy-Balancing and Lifetime Enhancement of Wireless Sensor Network with Archimedes Spiral Subir Halder, Amrita Ghosal, Aadirupa Saha, and Sipra DasBit
4. Hidden Node and Interference Aware Channel Assignment for Multi-radio Multi-channel Wireless Mesh Networks Fei Hao, Jin Ma, and Chunsheng Zhu
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5. Image Data Hiding Schemes Based on Graph Coloring Shuai Yue, Zhi-Hui Wang, Ching-Yu, Ching-Yun Chang, Chin-Chen Chang, and Ming-Chu Li
UIC 2011 Panel
Title: Challenges and Directions for Ubiquitous/Pervasive Health care Chair: Ramiro Liscano, UOIT, Canada Panelists: Jinhua Ma, Hosei University, Japan Jens Weber, University of Victoria, Canada Sumi Helal, University of Florida, USA Ioanis Nikolaidis, University of Alberta, Canada
Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 UIC 4
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 UIC 5
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
UIC 4: P2P / Ad Hoc Network Session Chair: Zhiwen Yu, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China
1. A Virtual Channel Technique for Supporting P2P Streaming Jau-Wu Huang, Kai-Chao Yang, Nien-Chen Lin, Chen-Lung Chan, Jia-Shung Wang
2. Bullet-Proof Verification (BPV) Method to Detect Black Hole Attack in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks Firoz Ahmed, Seokhoon Yoon, and Hoon Oh
3. A Variable Weight Based Fuzzy Data Fusion Algorithm for WSN Qianping Wang, Hongmei Liao, Ke Wang, and Yuan Sang
4. A Two-Layer Steganography Scheme Using Sudoku for Digital Images Yi-Hui Chen, Ci-Wei Lan, and Zhi-Hui Wang
UIC 5: Social and Ubiquitous Computing Session Chair: Jong-Kook Kim, Korea University, Korea
1. Ubiquitous Meeting Facilitator with Playful Real-Time User Interface Ying Zhang, Marshall Bern, Juan Liu, Kurt Partridge, Bo Begole, Bob Moore, Jim Reich, and Koji Kishimoto
2. Proactive Ambient Social Media for Supporting Human Decision Making Tatsuo Nakajima, Tetsuo Yamabe, and Mizuki Sakamoto
3. Social Interaction Mining in Small Group Discussion Using a Smart Meeting System Zhiwen Yu, Xingshe Zhou, Zhiyong Yu, Christian Becker, and Yuichi Nakamura
4. Verifiable and Lossless Distributed Media Content Sharing Pei-Yu Lin
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Sunday, September 4, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller -Schloer)
09:45-10:45 UIC 6
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 UIC 7
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 UIC 8 UIC 9
14:45-16:00 UIC 10 UIC 11
UIC 6: Context-Aware Technologies Session Chair: Chiu-Kuo Liang, Chung Hua University, Taiwan
1. Context-aware Service Composition Ichiro Satoh
2. Adaptive Context Oriented Component-Based Application Middleware (COCA-Middleware) Basel Magableh and Stephen Barrett
3. PreCon – Expressive Context Prediction Using Stochastic Model Checking Stefan Foll, Klaus Herrmann, and Kurt Rothermel
UIC 7: Algorithms for Ubiquitous Intelligence Session Chair: Jianhua Ma, Hosei University, Japan
1. A Bayesian Approach to Blind Separation of Mixed Discrete Sources by Gibbs Sampling Hang Zhang, Fanglin Gu, and Yi Xiao
2. The Coverage Problem in Directional Sensor Networks with Rotatable Sensors Yin-Chung Hsu, Yen-Ting Chen, Chiu-Kuo Liang
3. Automatic Birdsong Recognition with MFCC Based Syllable Feature Extraction Chih-Hsun Chou, Hui-Yu Ko
UIC 8: Security and Privacy Session Chair: Sheng-De Wang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
1. AdPriRec: A Context-Aware Recommender System for User Privacy in MANET Services Zheng Yan and Peng Zhang
2. Ensuring Security and Availability through Model-Based Cross-Layer Adaptation Minyoung Kim, Mark-Oliver Stehr, Ashish Gehani and Carolyn Talcott
3. Chameleon: A Model of Identification, Authorization and Accountability for Ubicomp Alireza Pirayesh Sabzevar and Joao Pedro Sousa
4. The Safety Related Legal Issues and Privacy Protection for Intelligent Vehicle Telematics in the United States Fa-Chang Cheng and Wen-Hsing Lai
UIC 9: Cloud and Services Computing Session Chair: Ching-Hsien Hsu, Chung Hua University, Taiwan
1. A Non-functional Property Based Service Selection and Service Verification Model Yu Bai, Yaoxue Zhang, Yuezhi Zhou, and Laurence T. Yang
2. Exploring an Adaptive Architecture for Service Discovery over MANETs Beihong Jin, Fusang Zhang, and Haibin Weng
3. Web Quality Assessment Model: Trust in QA Social Networks Tomas Knap and Irena Mlynkova
4. Reliability Comparison of Schedulability Test in Ubiquitous Computing Fei Teng, Lei Yu, and Frederic Magoules
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UIC 10: Energy Efficient Computing Session Chair: Man Lin, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada
1. System-Level Power-Accuracy Trade-Off in Bluetooth Low Energy Networks Jurgen Sommer, Simon L uders, Stephen Schmitt, and Wolfgang Rosenstiel
2. Individual Activity Data Mining and Appropriate Advice Giving towards Greener Lifestyles and Routines Toshihiro Tamura, Runhe Huang, Jianhua Ma, and Shiqin Yang
3. Reducing Total Energy for Reliability-Aware DVS Algorithms Yongwen Pan, Man Lin, and Laurence T. Yang
4. Implementation of a Green Power Management Algorithm for Virtual Machines on Cloud Computing Chao-Tung Yang, Kuan-Chieh Wang, Hsiang-Yao Cheng, Cheng-Ta Kuo, and Ching-Hsien Hsu
UIC 11: Ubiquitous Intelligent Computing Models Session Chair: Bernady O. Apduhan, Kyushu Sangyo University, Japan
1. A Practice Probability Frequent Pattern Mining Method over Transactional Uncertain Data Streams Guoqiong Liao, Linqing Wu, Changxuan Wan, and Naixue Xiong
2. Modeling Human Activity Semantics for Improved Recognition Performance Eunju Kim and Sumi Helal
3. Algorithms and Hardware Architectures for Variable Block Size Motion Estimation Sheng-De Wang and Chih-Hung Weng
4. Threshold Selection for Ultra-Wideband TOA Estimation Based on Skewness Analysis Hao Zhang, Xue-rong Cui, and T. Aaron Gulliver
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The ATC 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 ATC 1
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 ATC 2
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 ATC 3
17:30-19:30 Reception
ATC 1: Autonomic Architectures, Models & Systems I Session Chair: Theo Ungerer, University of Augsburg, Germany
1. Concept of a Reflex Manager to Enhance the Planner Component of an Autonomic/Organic System Julia Schmitt, Michael Roth, Rolf Kiefhaber, Florian Kluge, and Theo Ungerer
2. Safe Runtime Validation of Behavioral Adaptations in Autonomic Software Tariq M. King, Andrew A. Allen, Rodolfo Cruz, and Peter J. Clarke
3. A Configurable Environment Simulation Tool for Embedded Software Yuying Wang, Xingshe Zhou, Yunwei Dong, and Sha Liu
4. An Adaptive Management Mechanism for Resource Scheduling in Multiple Virtual Machine System Jian Wan, Laurence T. Yang, Yunfa Li, Xianghua Xu, and Neal N. Xiong
ATC 2: Trusted and Secure Computing Session Chair: Gregorio Martinez, University of Murcia, Spain
1. Hierarchical-CPK-Based Trusted Computing Cryptography Scheme Fajiang Yu, Tong Li, Yang Lin, and Huanguo Zhang
2. Facilitating the Use of TPM Technologies Using the Serenity Framework Antonio Munoz and Antonio Mana
3. Spam Detection on Twitter Using Traditional Classifiers M. McCord and M. Chuah
4. True Trustworthy Elections: Remote Electronic Voting Using Trusted Computing Matt Smart and Eike Ritter
ATC 3: Autonomic Communications Session Chairs: Christian Mϋller-Schloer, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany
1. Towards a Protocol for Autonomic Covert Communication Wanqi Li and Guanglei He
2. Autonomous Online Expansion Technology for Wireless Sensor Network Based Manufacturing System Md. Emdadul Haque, Fan Wei, Takehiro Gouda, Xiaodong Lu, and Kinji Mori
3. Self-organized Message Scheduling for Asynchronous Distributed Embedded Systems Tobias Ziermann, Zoran Salcic, and Jurgen Teich
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Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 N/A
10:45-11:00 N/A
11:00-12:20 N/A
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
Sunday, September 4, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer)
09:45-10:45 ATC 4
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 ATC 5
12:30-13:30 Lunch
ATC 4: Reliable, Secure and Trust Applications Session Chair: Yan Wang, Macquarie University, Australia
1. Copyright Protection in P2P Networks by False Pieces Pollution Chun-Hsin Wang, Chuang-Yang Chiu
2. A Survey of Security Issues in Trust and Reputation Systems for E-Commerce Stefan Spitz and York Tuchelmann
3. Detection and Classification of Different Botnet C&C Channels Gregory Fedynyshyn, Mooi Choo Chuah, and Gang Tan
ATC 5: Autonomic Architectures, Models & Systems II Session Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany
1. Virtualization with Automated Services Catalog for Providing Integrated Information Technology Infrastructure Robson de Oliveira Albuquerque, Luis Javier Garcia Villalba, Osmar Ribeiro Torres, and Flavio Elias Gomes de Deus
2. Research on Modeling and Analysis of CPS Zhang Yu, Dong Yunwei, Zhang Fan, and Zhang Yunfeng
3. A Method for Constructing Fault Trees from AADL Models Yue Li, Yi-an Zhu, Chun-yan Ma, and Meng Xu
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The FTDCS 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011
08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 FTDCS 1
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 FTDCS 2
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 FTDCS 3
17:30-19:30 Reception
FTDCS 1: Opening Session/Services, Cloud Computing Session Chair: Krishna Kant, NSF, USA
Opening Remarks: Krishna Kant, Stephen S. Yau, and Y. C. Chen
1. Providing Network Performance Isolation in VDE-based Cloud Computing Systems Vijeta Rathore, Jonghun Yoo, Jaesoo Lee, Seongsoo Hong
2. Anonymous Service Usage and Payment in Service-Based Systems Stephen S. Yau and Ho G. An
3. Implementation of a Green Power Management with Dynamic Resource Allocation for Cloud Virtual Machines Chao-Tung Yang, Kuan-Chieh Wang, Hsiang-Yao Cheng, Cheng-Ta Kuo, Willaim Cheng- Chung Chu
FTDCS 2: Web Services and Cyber-Physical Systems Session Chair: Yan Wang, Macquarie University, Australia
1. Web Service Discovery Based on User Requirements Lei Xu, Lianjie Chen, Baowen Xu, Hongji Yang
2. OWL model to support business process and web services in SOA Environments JoonSeok Park, Taewoo Nam, Keunhyuk Yeom
3. Leveraging Fragmental Semantic Data to Enhance Services Discovery Jian Wang, Jia Zhang, Jianxiao Liu, Zheng Li, Keqing He
4. A Cyber-Physical System for Public Environment Perception and Emergency Handling Wei Meng, Quan Liu, Wenjun Xu, Zude Zhou
FTDCS 3: Network and Real-Time Communications Session Chair: Yaw-chung Chen, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan
1. Striking the Balance between Content Diversity and Content Importance in Swarm-Based P2P Streaming
Chun-Yun Chan, Cheng-Fu Chou, Ming-Hung Chen 2. Autonomous Community Cooperation Technology for Real-Time Transmission of Emergency
Information Fan Wei, Md.Emadadul Haque, Kohei Ishii, Takehiro Gouda, Xiaodong Lu, Kinji Mori
3. Circuit Emulation Services over EPON based on Preemptive Priority Medium Access Control Wen-Kang Jia, Yuan-Rung Yang
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FTDCS 2011 Panel Title: Challenges and Future Trends of Distributed Computing Systems Chair: Stephen S. Yau, Arizone State University, USA Panelists: Jesύs Carretero, University Carlos III of Madrid, Spain Krishna Kant, George Mason University and NSF, USA Bhavani Thuraisingham, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Jeffrey Voas, National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA Yan Wang, Macquarie University, Australia
Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 FTDCS 4
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 FTDCS 5
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
FTDCS 4: Distributed Database Management Session Chair: Jia Zhang, Northern Illinois University, USA
1. Enhancing Interoperability in Cross-Platform Enterprise Mashups through Data Aggregation and Extraction Max Tritschler, Robert Kleinfeld, Stephan Steglich
2. A Dilemma in Assessing Stability of Feature Selection Algorithms Salem Alelyani, Zheng Zhao, Huan Liu
3. Database Backed by Cloud Data Store for On-premise Applications Duy-Phuong Pham, Shyan-Ming Yuan, Emery Jou
FTDCS 5: Wireless and Secure Communications Session Chair: Baowen Xu, Najing University, China
1. Connecting Two Worlds: Physical Models and Graph Models of Wireless Network Topologies Andras Farago, Stefano Basagni
2. A Pre-authentication Scheme on WiMAX for QoS Improvement of Mobile Services Chen-Hua Shih, Wei-Yun Chang, Yaw-Chung Chen
3. An Efficient Anonymous Key Agreement Protocol based on Chaotic Maps Huei-Ru Tseng, Emery Jou
Final Remarks: FTDCS 2012 Planning – Stephen S. Yau
35
The AHPCN 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 N/A
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 N/A
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 N/A
17:30-19:30 Reception
36
The AHPCN 2011 Technical Program
Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 AHPCN 1
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 AHPCN 2
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
AHPCN 1: Cluster, Grid and Cloud Computing Session Chair: Young Jin Nam, University of Minnesota, USA
1. Paravirtualization for Scientific Computing: Performance Analysis and Prediction Javier Delgado, Anas Salah Eddin, Seyed Masoud Sadjadi, Malek Adjouadi
2. An Adaptive Scheduler Framework for Complex Workflow Jobs on Grid Systems G. M. Siddesh and K. G. Srinivasa
3. Novel Data Protection Model in Healthcare Cloud Lingfeng Chen, Doan B. Hoang
4. Index-Based Admission Control and Load Balancing of Firm Real-Time Jobs in Multi-clusters José Niño-Mora
AHPCN 2: Distributed Systems and Applications Session Chair: MengXia Zhu, Southern Illinois University, USA
1. A File Level RAID in Blue Whale File System Zhenhan Liu, Xiaoxuan Meng, and Lu Xu
2. A Hybrid P2P System to Support MMORPG Playability Ignasi Barri, Francesc Gine, Concepci Roig
3. A Fault-Tolerant Workflow Mapping Algorithm under End-to-end Delay Constraint Fei Cao, Mengxia Zhu
4. Chunk Fragmentation Level: An Effective Indicator for Read Performance Degradation in Deduplication Storage Youngjin Nam, Guanlin Lu, Nohhyun Park, Weijun Xiao, and David H. C. Du
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Sunday, September 4, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer)
09:45-10:45 AHPCN 3 AHPCN 4
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 AHPCN 5 AHPCN 6
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 AHPCN 7
AHPCN 3: System Architectures Session Chair: Jing Chen, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
1. Dimensioning HPC architectures to improve performance on heavy-load data applications Alberto Núñez, Javier Fernández, Jesús Carretero, Laura Prada, Mario Blaum
2. An Analytical Model Proposed for Evaluating Efficiency of Partitioning Code in Hybrid Architectures Based on DSP and FPGA Ericles Rodrigues Sousa, Luis Meloni
3. DM-PAS: A Data Mining Prefetching Algorithm for Storage System Mais Nijim, Yousef Nijim, Remzi Sker, Vamshi Reddy, Raghu Nandi Raju
4. Building A Multi-Kernel Embedded System with High Performance IPC Mechanism Jing Chen, Da-Wei Chang, Chung-Ping Young, Guan-Ying Huang, Su-Lin Chu, Chung-Yuan Ke, Shih-Tun Yen, Tsang-Shuo Kuo
AHPCN 4: Scientific and Engineering Computing Session Chair: Ruth Shaw, University of New Brunswick at Saint John, Canada
1. Designing APU Oriented Scientific Computing Applications in OpenCL Matthew Doerksen, Steven Solomon, Parimala Thulasiraman
2. High Performance Computation of Moments for an Accurate Classification of Bone Tissue Images Manuel Jesús Martín-Requena, Manuel Ujaldón
3. Using Graphics Processors for a High Performance Normalization of Gene Expressions Andrés Rodríguez, Oswaldo Trelles, Manuel Ujaldón
AHPCN 5: Mobile and Pervasive Computing Session Chair: Ramiro Liscano, University of Ontraio Institute of Technology, Canada
1. A Broadcast Tree-Based Centralized Scheduling Mechanism for IEEE 802.16 Mesh Networks Tzong-An Su, Hsun-Hui Chu
2. A New Data Filtering Scheme Based on Statistical Data Analysis for Monitoring Systems in Wireless Sensor Network Seung Tae Hong, Jae Woo Chang
3. Ed-RCS: An Energy-aware Event-driven Regional Clustering Scheme for WSNs Dongmin Choi, Ilyong Chung
4. A User Authentication for Healthcare Application using Wireless Medical Sensor Networks Pardeep Kumar, Sang-Gon Lee, Hoon-Jae Lee
AHPCN 6: Parallel/Multicore Computing Session Chair: Manuel Ujaldón, University of Malaga, Spain
1. Source-to-source Code Translator: OpenMP C to CUDA Gabriel Noaje, Michael Krajecki, Christophe Jaillet
2. A Data Parallel Approach to XML Parsing and Query Cheng-Han You, Sheng-De Wang
3. Java Support Packages and Benchmarks for Multi-Core Processors Vlad Olaru, Anca Hangan, Gheorghe Sebestyen-Pal
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The MELT 2011 Technical Program
AHPCN 7: Network Designs and Routing Algorithms Session Chair Joe-Air Jiang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
1. An Evaluation of the TCP and UDP Processing Requirements Network Interface Design at 100 Gbps Mohamed Elbeshti, Mike Dixon, Terry Koziniec
2. Simulation of DDOS Attacks on P2P Networks Nidal Qwasmi, Fayyaz Ahmed and Ramiro Liscano 3. Routing Path Determination Using QoS Metrics and Priority Based Evolutionary Optimization
Divya Kumar, Divya Kashyap, K.K. Mishra, A.K. Mishra 4. Design and Implementation of Cluster-based Routing Protocol using Message Success Rate in
Sensor Networks Min Yoon, Jaewoo Chang
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 MELT
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
17:30-19:30 Reception
MELT: Mobile Entity Localization and Tracking Session Chair: Ying Zhang, Palo Alto Research Center, USA
1. Alternatives for indoor location estimation on uncoordinated environments Juan-Luis Gorricho, Josep Cotrina
2. Physical Distance vs. Signal Distance: An Analysis towards Better Location Fingerprinting Mu Zhou, Prashant Krishnamurthy, Yubin Xu, Lin Ma
3. Entity Localization and Tracking: A Sensor Fusion-based Mechanism in WSNs Stefano Tennina, Marco Valletta, Fortunato Santucci, Marco Di Renzo, Fabio Graziosi,
Riccardo Minutolo 4. Human Motion Predication and Tracking for Indoor Mobile Relay Networks
Christopher Archibald, Ying Zhang, Julia Liu 5. Prototyping Smart Objects for the Mass
Geert Vanderhulst, Fahim Kawsar, Johan Criel, Lieven Trappeniers 6. Performance Modeling of a Consolidated Java Application Server
Hitoshi Oi, Kazuaki Takahashi
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The USST 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 USST 1
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 USST 2
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
17:30-19:30 Reception
USST 1: Ubiquitous Service Systems and Technologies I Session Chair: Yo-Ping Huang, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan
1. Discovering Abiotic Interactions between Bird Habitat and Water Quality through Ubiquitous Computing
Yo-Ping Huang, Chien-Chun Lin and Frode Eika Sandnes 2. Design and Implementation an Energy-aware Routing Mechanism for Solar Wireless Sensor
Networks Hung-Chi Chu, Wei-Tsung Siao, Wei-Tai Wu and Sheng-Chih Huang 3. Agent-based Service Migration Framework in Hybrid Cloud
Chih-Tien Fan, Wei-Jen Wang and Yue-Shan Chang 4. A Geometry-Distortion Resistant Image Detection System Based on Log-Polar Transform and Scale
Invariant Feature Transform Shang-Lin Hsieh, Yu-Wei Chen, Chun-Che Chen, and Tsun-Wei Chang
USST 2: Ubiquitous Service Systems and Technologies II Session Chair: Yue-Shan Chang, National Taipei University of Technology, Taiwan
1. Developing Ubiquitous Multi-touch Sensing and Displaying Systems with Vision-based Finger Detection and Event Identification Techniques Yen-Lin Chen, Chuan-Yen Chiang, Wen-Yew Liang, Tung-Ju Hsieh, Da-Cheng Lee, Shyan-Ming Yuan, and Yang-Lang Chang
2. An Experience of a Lightweight User-centric Dynamic Service Composition Mechanism Tuo Zhang, Ken Chen, ChunYang Yin, Maamar Akerma
3. Information Lifecycle Management in City-Wide Ubiquitous Computing Environment Kyung-Won Nam, Eui-Yeol Choi, Jin-Su Park, Hye-Young Park
4. The Prospects of Jurisdictional Issues in Cyberspace Fa-Chang Cheng and Wen-Hsing Lai
5. Tyche project: a Context Aware Self-organization Middleware for Ubiquitous Environment Charles Gouin-Vallerand, Sylvain Giroux and Bessam Abdulrazak
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The USWAN 2011 Technical Program
Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 USWAN 1
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 USWAN 2
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
USWAN 1: Mobile Networks Session Chair: Tsung-Han Lee, National Taichung University, Taiwan
1. Performance Analysis for Schemes Supporting SIP in the Nested Mobile Network Ing-Chau Chang, Yang-Yu Chang
2. A Single Mobile Anchor Localization Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks Yu-Jhong Fu, Tsung-Han Lee, Lin-Huang Chang
3. Energy-Aware Gossip Routing for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks Tsung-Chuan Huang, Sheng-Chieh Chen, Lung Tang
4. QoS Provisioning Single-channel Opportunistic Spectrum Access Strategy in Cognitive Radio Networks
Hang-sheng zhao, Fan Wang
USWAN 2: Vehicular Networks Session Chair: Lin-huang Chang, National Taichung University, Taiwan
1. RWND based ARD-CMT SCTP for Wireless Transmission L. H. Chang, H. F. Chang, P. H. Huang, S. J. Chen
2. Gateway Discovery in VANET Cloud Yen-Wen Lin, Jie-Min Shen, Hao-Chun Weng
3. Adaptive Packet Aggregation for Header Compression in Vehicular Wireless Networks Tsan-Pin Wang, Yu-Chun Chen 4. Design and Implementation of a DSRC Based Vehicular Warning and Notification System C. R. Dow, M. H. Ho, Y. H. Lee, S. F. Hwang
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The ESCAPE 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 ESCAPE 1
17:30-19:30 Reception
ESCAPE 1: Extreme Scale Computing Application Enablement - Modeling and Tools I Session Chair: I-Hsin Chung, IBM Research, USA
1. Invited Talk: Seeking Reach Tiers of Predictive Segments
Joe S.C. Wu 2. Scalable Communication-aware Task Mapping Algorithms for Interconnected Multicore Systems
I-Hsin Chung, Che-Rung Lee, Jiazheng Zhou, and Yeh-Ching Chung 3. Dependability Modeling and Analysis for the Virtual Data Center of Cloud Computing
Bing Wei, Chuang Lin, Xiangzhen Kong
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Saturday, September 3, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote IV: Victor C.M. Leung (Chair: Sumi Helal)
09:45-10:45 ESCAPE 2
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 ESCAPE 3
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 FTDCS-2011 Panel
14:45-16:00 HPCC-2011 Panel
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 UIC-2011 Panel
20:00-22:00 Banquet
ESCAPE 2: Extreme Scale Computing Application Enablement - Modeling and Tools II Session Chair: Joe S.C. Wu, American Online, USA
Keynote: Enabling Applications at Extreme Scale: Lessons Learned from Two PDE-Based Codes Dinesh Kaushik, , Argonne National Laboratory, USA Abstract: We discuss here some requirements from application codes as we scale from the current petascale to next generation machines (hundreds of petaflops to exascale). Several architectural issues such as total memory, memory per thread of execution, memory bandwidth, and bulk synchronization cost at the extreme scale are coming to the forefront. Some of these are being dictated by stringent power requirements. The data motion at the memory and network level will be very expensive and consume significant fraction of power. Therefore, the application codes need to better characterize the memory references, implement a hierarchy of programming models (to match the hardware layout), and work with less synchronous algorithms. This presentation will highlight these issues in the context of two applications codes: CFD (fluid flow over Onera M6 Wing – finite volume in space, implicit in time, and employing unstructured meshes) and deterministic neutral particle transport.
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1. Design of a Partially Buffered Crossbar Router for Mesh-based Network-on-Chips Wen-Fong Wang, and Zhi-Chun Jao
ESCAPE 3: Extreme Scale Computing Application Enablement - Modeling and Tools Ⅲ
Session Chair: Che-Rung Lee, National TsingHua University, Taiwan
1. Xruntime: A Seamless Runtime Environment for High Performance Computing Keiji Yamamoto, Atsushi Hori, Shinji Sumimoto, Yutaka Ishikawa
2. Heuristic-based techniques for mapping irregular communication graphs to mesh topologies Abhinav Bhatele, and Laxmikant V. Kale
3. An Approach to Analyze Effects of Soft Errors from Dynamical Software Behaviors Lei Xiong, Qingping Tan
4. Formal Specification and Experimental Analysis of an Interactive Epidemic Simulation Framework Yifei Ma, Keith Bisset, Jiangzhuo Chen, Suruchi Deodhar, Madhav Marathe
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The EMCA 2011 Technical Program
Friday, September 2, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:15 Opening Ceremony
09:15-10:00 Keynote I: Jeffrey Voas (Chair: Stephen S. Yau)
10.00-10.45 Keynote II: Han-Chieh Chao (Chair: Ying Zhang)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:15 Keynote III: Ivan Stojmenovic (Chair: Jesύs Carretero)
14:15-16:00 EMCA 1
16:00-16:15 Coffee Break
16:15-17:30 EMCA 2
17:30-19:30 Reception
EMCA 1: Embedded Multicore Computing and Applications I Session Chair: Mengxia Zhu, Southern Illinois University, USA
1. GPU Accelerated Microarray Data Analysis Using Random Matrix Theory Joey Ingram, Mengxia Zhu
2. Parallelizing TUNAMI-N1 using GPGPU Harsh Gidra, Israrul Haque, Nitin P. Kumar, Sargurunathan M., M. S. Gaur, Vijay Laxmi, M. Zwolinski, Virendra Singh
3. Heterogeneous Multi-core SoC Implementation with System-Level Design Methodology Jen-Chieh Yeh, Kung-Ming Ji, Shing-Wu Tung, Shau-Yin Tseng
4. CUDA-FRESCO: Frequency-based RE-Sequencing Tool based on CO-clustering Segmentation by GPU Chun Yuan Lin, Sheng-Ta Li, Che-Lun Hung, Chuan Yi Tang, Yaw-Ling Lin
EMCA 2: Embedded Multicore Computing and Applications II Session Chair: Chia-Pang Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
1. Enable OpenCL Compiler with Open64 Infrastructures Yu-Te Lin, Shao-Chung Wang, Wen-Li Shih, Brian Kun-Yuan Hsieh, Jenq-Kuen Lee
2. Energy-efficient Visual Eyes System for Wildlife Chia-Pang Chen, Chi-Hung Lin, Ta-Wei Lai, Cheng-Long Chuang, Tzu-Shiang Lin, Joe-Air Jiang, Hsiao-Wei Yuan, Chyi-Rong Chiou, Chung-Hang Hong
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The SHPCC 2011 Technical Program
Sunday, September 4, 2011 08:00-16:00 Registration
09:00-09:45 Keynote V: Gregorio Martinez (Chair: Christian Mϋller-Schloer)
10:45-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:20 N/A
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:45 SHPCC 1
14.45-16:00 SHPCC 2
SHPCC 1: Substainable HPC Cloud Computing I Session Chair: Justin Shi, Temple University, USA
1. Improving Performance of CAPE Using Discontinuous Incremental Checkpointing Viet Hai Ha, Eric Renault
2. Cost-Conscious Scheduling for Large Graph Processing in the Cloud Jian Li, Sen Su, Xiang Cheng, Qingjia Huang, Zhongbao Zhang
3. A Decentralized Model for Controlling Selfish Use for Desktop Grid Systems Heithem Abbes, Christophe Cérin, Bassem Oueghlani
SHPCC 2: Substainable HPC Cloud Computing II Session Chair: Justin Shi, Temple University, USA
1. Distributed Resource Allocation Games in Horizontal Dynamic Cloud Federation Platform
Mohammad Mehedi Hassan, Biao Song, Eui-Nam Huh 2. Resource Planning for Parallel Processing in the Cloud
Justin Shi, Moussa Taifi, Abdallah Khreishah
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Registration Desk
The Registration Desk will be open to assist you at the following times:
Thursday, September 01, 2011, 3.00pm – 6.00pm
Friday, September 02, 2011, 8:00am – 6:00pm
Saturday, September 03, 2011, 8:00am – 6:00pm
Sunday, September, 04, 2011, 8:00am – 6:00pm
Name Badges and Meal Tickets
All delegates, sponsors and speakers of the IEEE HPCC/UIC/ATC/FTDCS 2011 and associated workshops will be provided with a name badge, to be collected upon registration. This badge must be worn at all times as it is your official pass to all technical sessions of the conferences and morning and afternoon teas. There are 5 different meal tickets for the welcome reception on September 2, 3 lunches on September 2, 3 and 4, and banquet on September 3, respectively.
Presentation Information Language The presentation language of the IEEE HPCC/UIC/ATC/FTDCS 2011 and associated workshops is English.
Checking In Session Chairs are requested to register at least 2 hours before their session, or as soon as the Registration Desk is open.
Setting Up You are required to arrive at the room (in which you will deliver your talk) 15 minutes before the commencement of the session. Upon arrival please confirm your attendance with the Session Chair and familiarize yourself with the venue. Please bring with you a single paragraph summary, including your name (as you would like to be introduced), affiliation and research interests (maximum 100 words). Please present this to the session Session Chair upon arrval, for use for introductory purposes, prior to your talk. Upon arrival, please copy your slides file to the presentation computer. If you plan to use your own equipment, please ensure it is ready to go prior to the session commencing, since there is very little time between presentations. If you have requested optional equipment, ensure that is in the room. In the larger conference rooms please, make sure you familiarise yourself with the audio system. For all assistance, please speak to the Session Chair.
Timing Please ensure your check the program for the exact time of your session and where your paper falls within the session. It is recommended that all IEEE HPCC/UIC/ATC/FTDCS 2011 paper presentations use 25 minutes presentation time including 5 minutes question time. However, the Session Chairs will determine the exact presentation time for each paper, based on the number of presentations in each session. The Session Chairs will ensure that you do not over-run the time allocated.
Please keep strictly to this time guideline
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The IEEE HPCC/UIC/ATC/FTDCS 2011 Conference Venue
107 Tunnel Mountain Drive, Banff,
Alberta, Canada, T1L 1H5 Web site: http://www.banffcentre.ca/
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Travel Guide to the Conference Venue Via Calgary International Airport (YYC)
If you fly from abroad to Calgary International Airport, it is strongly suggested to take the shuttle bus from airport to conference venue (The Banff Centre) directly. The special rate for delegates is $44.52 one way and $89.04 return, prices include tax. The schedule for the shuttle from Calgary International Airport to Banff: 9:00am; 10:30am; 11:30am; 12:30am; 13:30pm; 14:30 pm; 15:30pm; 16:30pm; 17:30pm; 18:30pm; 20:30pm; 22:30pm. The schedule for the shuttle from Banff back to Shanghai Pudong International Airport: 5:00am; 6:00am; 7:30am; 8:30am; 9:30am; 11:30am; 12:30am; 13:30pm; 14:30pm; 15:30pm; 17:30pm; 19:30pm;.
By car
Transportation to and from Banff is easy on Canada's national Highway 1, the Trans-Canada Highway. The drive from Calgary International Airport takes a little less than 2 hours, a distance of 145 km (90 miles). Because Banff townsite is inside Banff National Park, you will need to purchase a national park pass at the Park gate. Rates are $9 per day per person, or $18 per day for a car with 2-7 people.
By Train
There is no regular passenger rail service to Banff. However, Rocky Mountaineer Vacations operates seasonal two-day sightseeing trips, May to October, with stops in Banff. Eastbound trips start from Vancouver and westbound trips from Calgary.
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Conference Venue Banff Centre Campus Map