Call
for Papers
IEEE Communications Magazine
Feature
Topic on
Military Communications
The
design and fielding of military communications systems capable of
enabling Network Centric Operations remains one of the greatest
challenges facing military institutions today. The challenges are
particularly acute in the area of tactical wireless communications,
which are typically characterized by user mobility and unpredictable
transmission channels. Together with demanding security requirements
and the need for interoperability among disparate systems, including
legacy systems and those of allies, these characteristics make it
difficult to leverage commercial wireless technology to meet the
needs and expectations of military users. Some of these difficulties
can be traced back to a lack of fundamental theoretical underpinnings
for communications networks, a problem that is widely recognized
today and beginning to receive significant attention in academia and
industry alike. While network theoretic frameworks for wireless
systems remain elusive, there is a great deal of work aimed at
improving the design of wireless systems, some of which include the
adoption of new design paradigms. Cross layer design remains a
popular approach to minimizing inefficiencies associated with
strictly layered design paradigms in highly dynamic wireless
environments. Researchers are also focusing on the idea of exploiting
the inherent broadcast properties of wireless networks through the
development of cooperative diversity protocols, though practical
applicability in highly mobile environments remains a question.
Network coding is an example of another promising, and increasingly
popular, approach aimed at improving the throughput of multi-hop
wireless networks. Other areas of research, including network
security, mobile routing, dynamic resource allocation, management and
media access control, continue to play an important role in the
struggle to improve the feasibility of truly network centric
operations.
This Feature Topic will bring together the most
recent advances in communications and networking technologies
applicable to the area of network centric military communications.
Papers are solicited that present research, development,
experimentation, test and measurement, and practical deployment
activities.
Suggested areas include (but are not restricted to)
the following subject categories:
- Network
Science for military communications
- Cognitive radio
and cognitive networking
- Peer-to-peer networking
- Cross-layer design and optimization
- Network
management and control in tactical networks
- Network
characterization and modeling
- Protocol efficiency on
bandwidth constrained links
- Mobility management
- Signaling and Quality of Service provisioning
- Mobile routing
- Network security and
information assurance
- Cooperative Diversity
- Freespace Optical Communications
- Network
coding
- Dynamic spectrum allocation and management
- Airborne networks
- Space-based
networks
- Content Oriented Networking
Submission
Articles should be tutorial in nature and be
of direct interest to those engineering military communication
systems. They should be written in a style comprehensible to readers
outside the specialty of the article. Mathematical equations should
not be used (In justified cases up to three simple equations could be
allowed, provided you have the consent of the Guest Editor. The
inclusion of more than three equations requires permission from the
Editor-in-Chief). Articles should not exceed 4500 words. Figures and
tables should be limited to a combined total of six. Please send PDF
formatted papers by April 1, 2010 to Manuscript Central (http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/commag-ieee) resister or
log in, and go to the Author Center. Follow the instructions there.
Select the topic "Military Communications Series".
Schedule
for Submissions
Submission Deadline: April 1
Notification
of Acceptance: July 1
Final Manuscript Due: August
1
Publication Date: October (yearly)
Guest
Editors
Torleiv Maseng
Forsvarets
Forskningsinstitutt
Post Box 25
2027 Kjeller,
Norway
Phone: +47 63807204
Email: torleiv.maseng@ffi.no
Randall J. Landry
The MITRE
Corporation
202 Burlington Rd
Bedford, MA 01730,
USA
Phone: +1 781-271-8514
Email:rlandry@mitre.org
Ken Young
Telecordia
Technologies
One Telcordia Drive
Piscataway, NJ 08854,
USA
Phone: +1 732-699-2221
Email:kcy@research.telcordia.com