Call for Papers
Special Section on "Medium Access and Call Admission Control Algorithms for
Next Generation Wireless Networks"
ACM Mobile Computing and Communications Review (MC2R)
Theme
With the pervasive presence of mobile personal wireless computing devices,
wireless communication technologies are rapidly evolving and influencing our
daily way of life. The new wireless data and multimedia services that are
added and supported on wireless networks alongside the traditional voice
services pose formidable challenges to these networks in their effort to
satisfy strict Quality of Service (QoS) requirements. These challenges are
further exasperated by the inherent transmission impairments of wireless
links (fading, noise) and user mobility.
To cope with the challenges related to supporting both the existing and the
ever increasing new services, next generation wireless technologies will
need to fine tune and/or incorporate new sets of traffic control procedures.
This special section will be focusing on two such control procedures related
to wireless medium sharing and network overload.
A well designed Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol reduces system costs by
maximizing system capacity while successfully integrating different classes
of traffic (e.g., voice, data, multimedia) and optimally allocating the
limited radio channel bandwidth among them. Congestion control poses yet
additional set of challenges to wireless network providers. Network
congestion is difficult to resolve when real-time traffic, sensitive to both
latency and packet loss, is present, without jeopardizing the QoS expected
by the users of that traffic. Call Admission Control (CAC) is a strategy
used to limit the number of call connections into the network in order to
reduce network congestion, therefore enabling the system to provide the
desired QoS to newly incoming as well as existing calls. The mobility of
users adds challenging requirements to the Call Admission Control Mechanism.
When mobile users change their point of attachment, the end-to-end path may
be changed while they still expect to receive the same QoS. This implies
that the new end-to-end path should also support the existing QoS (i.e., a
reservation on the new path may be required).
Topics of interest
This highly selective special section of the ACM MC2R aims at providing a
state-of-the-art reference of the current research in the fields of Medium
Access Control Protocols and Call Admission Control Algorithms for next
generation wireless networks.
Previously unpublished, original papers of very high quality that are not
currently under review by another conference or journal are solicited
focusing on representative topics related to this special section, such as:
>> Medium Access Control Protocols and Transmission Scheduling Mechanisms.
>> Call Admission Control and Traffic Policing Mechanisms for wireless networks.
>> Channel Allocation.
>> CDMA/TDMA wireless systems.
>> QoS issues for multimedia traffic over wireless networks.
>> Performance evaluation of wireless networks.
>> Mobile service and QoS management.
>> Wireless multimedia services.
>> Handoff algorithms for mobility support.
>> Protocols and algorithms coping with limited bandwidth and intermittent connectivity of wireless networks.
Important Dates
Paper submission deadline: February 28, 2005.
Notification of acceptance: June 15, 2005.
Submission of final version: July 15, 2005.
Submission Instructions
Prospective authors should submit their paper electronically to the email
address of one of the three guest editors.
All material submitted must be in PostScript or PDF format. If using
PostScript, only version 2 or later should be used, and reference only
Computer Modern or standard Adobe fonts (Courier, Times Roman, or
Helvetica); other PostScript type 1 and type 2 fonts may be used but must be
included in the PostScript file. Type 3 fonts should not be used as they
reproduce poorly in the digital library and on many printers. Paper length
should be the equivalent of no longer than 12 pages in MC2R format (two
columns, 11pt font).
Guest Editors
Prof. Michael Paterakis, Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering,
Technical University of Crete, Greece.
Email: pateraki@telecom.tuc.gr
Dr. Chatschik Bisdikian, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, NY,
USA.
Email: bisdik@us.ibm.com
Dr. Polychronis Koutsakis, Department of Electronic and Computer
Engineering, Technical University of Crete, Greece.
Email: polk@telecom.tuc.gr
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