SenSys 2015
Date: Nov 01, 2015 5:00 pm – Nov 05, 2015 2:00 am
Location: Seoul, South Korea
The 13th ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems
Sensors have become an essential part of computing systems and applications. Computing today is increasingly characterized by ubiquitous, information-rich sensors that produce massive quantities of data about the physical world. This new era of computing is driving important new systems issues, and requires new system-level approaches and design principles.
The ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (SenSys 2015) is a computer systems conference focused on the architecture, design, imple- mentation, and performance of sensors, as well as sensor-enabled smart sys- tems. ACM SenSys brings together academic, industry, and government pro- fessionals to a single-track, highly selective forum on sensor network design, implementation, and application. It is the premier forum to discuss systems is- sues that arise specifically due to sensing. SenSys takes a broad view on the ar- eas of computing that are relevant to the future of networked sensor and actua- tor systems, and topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:
- Compelling challenge papers grounded in technology trends
- Applications and deployment experiences
- Information processing and knowledge discovery from sensor data
- Wearable, human-centric, and social sensing
- Ubiquitous, mobile and pervasive sensing
- New sensor technology and hardware designs
- Internet of Things, Cyber-Physical Systems, and Sensor Swarms
- Software for sensor systems
- Communication and networking for sensor systems
- Sensor context such as time and location estimation
- Energy harvesting and management for long-term sensor operation
- Storage, retrieval, processing, and management of sensor data
- Fault-tolerance and reliability of sensor systems
- Sensor data quality, integrity, and trustworthiness
- Security and privacy of sensor systems
We invite technical papers describing original ideas, ground breaking results, and/or real-world experiences involving innovative sensor systems. Successful submissions will explain why the topic is relevant to a vision of the future of sensing systems. Submissions will be judged on originality, significance, clari- ty, relevance, and correctness. In addition to citing relevant, published work, authors must cite and relate their submissions to relevant prior publications of the their own. Ethical approval for experiments with human subjects should be demonstrated as part of the submission.
General Chair
Junehwa Song (KAIST, South Korea)
Program Chairs
Tarek Abdelhazer (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, IL, USA) Cecilia Mascolo (University of Cambridge, UK)
Submission Guidelines
Submissions must be full papers, at most 14 single-spaced 8.5" x 11" pages, including figures, tables, and references, two- column format, using 10-point type on 12- point (single-spaced) leading, with a max- imum text block of 7" wide x 9" deep with an inter-column spacing of .25".
Authors must make a good faith effort to anonymize their submissions. Pa- pers that do not meet the size, format- ting, and anonymization requirements will not be reviewed. Accepted sub- missions will be available on the ACM digital library at least one week before the conference.
Key Dates
- Paper Registration and Abstract: April 3, 2015, AOE.
- Paper Submission Deadline: April 10, 2015, AOE.
- Notification of Paper Acceptance: July 17, 2015.
Note these are hard deadlines. No extensions will be granted.
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The 13th ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems
Sensors have become an essential part of computing systems and applications. Computing today is increasingly characterized by ubiquitous, information-rich sensors that produce massive quantities of data about the physical world. This new era of computing is driving important new systems issues, and requires new system-level approaches and design principles.
The ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (SenSys 2015) is a computer systems conference focused on the architecture, design, imple- mentation, and performance of sensors, as well as sensor-enabled smart sys- tems. ACM SenSys brings together academic, industry, and government pro- fessionals to a single-track, highly selective forum on sensor network design, implementation, and application. It is the premier forum to discuss systems is- sues that arise specifically due to sensing. SenSys takes a broad view on the ar- eas of computing that are relevant to the future of networked sensor and actua- tor systems, and topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:
- Compelling challenge papers grounded in technology trends
- Applications and deployment experiences
- Information processing and knowledge discovery from sensor data
- Wearable, human-centric, and social sensing
- Ubiquitous, mobile and pervasive sensing
- New sensor technology and hardware designs
- Internet of Things, Cyber-Physical Systems, and Sensor Swarms
- Software for sensor systems
- Communication and networking for sensor systems
- Sensor context such as time and location estimation
- Energy harvesting and management for long-term sensor operation
- Storage, retrieval, processing, and management of sensor data
- Fault-tolerance and reliability of sensor systems
- Sensor data quality, integrity, and trustworthiness
- Security and privacy of sensor systems
We invite technical papers describing original ideas, ground breaking results, and/or real-world experiences involving innovative sensor systems. Successful submissions will explain why the topic is relevant to a vision of the future of sensing systems. Submissions will be judged on originality, significance, clari- ty, relevance, and correctness. In addition to citing relevant, published work, authors must cite and relate their submissions to relevant prior publications of the their own. Ethical approval for experiments with human subjects should be demonstrated as part of the submission.
General Chair
Junehwa Song (KAIST, South Korea)
Program Chairs
Tarek Abdelhazer (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, IL, USA) Cecilia Mascolo (University of Cambridge, UK)
Submission Guidelines
Submissions must be full papers, at most 14 single-spaced 8.5" x 11" pages, including figures, tables, and references, two- column format, using 10-point type on 12- point (single-spaced) leading, with a max- imum text block of 7" wide x 9" deep with an inter-column spacing of .25".
Authors must make a good faith effort to anonymize their submissions. Pa- pers that do not meet the size, format- ting, and anonymization requirements will not be reviewed. Accepted sub- missions will be available on the ACM digital library at least one week before the conference.
Key Dates
- Paper Registration and Abstract: April 3, 2015, AOE.
- Paper Submission Deadline: April 10, 2015, AOE.
- Notification of Paper Acceptance: July 17, 2015.
Note these are hard deadlines. No extensions will be granted.