Call for Papers

 

IEEE Wireless Communications Magazine

Special Issue on

 

Wireless Mesh Networking: Theories, Protocols, and Systems

 

 

Wireless mesh networking has become an indispensable technique for the next generation wireless networks. It is critical to large-scale wireless networks with no pre-existing infrastructure. It enables quick-and-easy extension of a local area network into a wide area. Prior efforts on wireless networks, especially multi-hop ad hoc networks, have led to significant research contributions that range from fundamental results on theoretical capacity bounds to various flavors of routing and transport protocols. However, the work is far from enough. The state-of-art is insufficient for deploying sizable wireless mesh networks. Important aspects such as network radio range, network capacity, scalability, manageability, and security remain open problems.

 

To address capacity and scaling concerns, researchers are experimenting with systems that use multiple radios, frequency-agile radios, directional and multiple input multiple output (MIMO) antennas. Further, there are renewed interests in carrying out research on MAC protocols and cross-layer design that breaks the traditional networking layering norm. It is clear that such novel techniques are needed to increase system capacity, extend network range, and increase scale, if such networks are to become viable. Similarly, while there exist several security protocols for wireless networks, especially for IEEE 802.11 WLANs, it is still not clear how one can build a trustworthy network in a multi-hop ad hoc environment like wireless mesh networks. Finally, although new research results are published each year, progress on practical protocol implementation and system integration has lagged considerably. To ensure wireless mesh networks to be widely deployed, many research groups are starting to accumulate practical experience through building testbeds and deploying trial systems. In parallel to these efforts, several IEEE standard groups are also actively pursuing wireless mesh networking techniques.

 

This special issue is devoted to the research and development of practical, deployable, and low-cost wireless mesh networks. Papers from both industry and academia will be solicited through an open call-for-papers. Topics of interests include, but are not limited to,

 

      Techniques for capacity and range extension

      Multi-radio, multi-spectral systems

      Cognitive and frequency-agile radios

      Multichannel MACs, MAC protocol for directional antennas and MIMO systems

      High-performance scalable single-channel MACs

      Programmable MACs

      Cross-layer design and optimization

      Trustworthy networks, privacy and security models

      Incentives, cooperation, and reputation systems

      Mobility, power, and topology management

      Network management with zero-configuration

      Practical system architecture of wireless mesh networks

      Testbed and deployment experience

      Application and usage scenarios

      Emerging standards: IEEE 802.11s, IEEE 802.15.5, IEEE 802.16 mesh, IEEE 802.20 mesh

 

 

Submission

 

Prospective authors should follow the following guidelines to prepare their manuscripts:

http://www.comsoc.org/pubs/pcm/pub_guidelines.html

 

Please send PDF (preferred), Microsoft Word, or PostScript formatted papers to Xudong Wang (wxudong@ieee.org) no later than April 15, 2005.

 

Manuscript Due: April 15, 2005

Acceptance Notification: September 1, 2005

Final Manuscript Due: November 1, 2005

Publication: February, 2006

 

 

Guest Editors

 

Xudong Wang

Senior Staff Research Engineer

Kiyon, Inc.

La Jolla, CA 92037

Phone: +1 858-453-4708

Fax: +1 858-453-3647

Email: wxudong@ieee.org

 

Victor Bahl

Senior Researcher and Manager

Systems and Networking Group

Microsoft Research

Redmond, WA 98052

Phone: +1 425-706-1021

Fax: +1 425-936-7329

Email: bahl@microsoft.com

 

Jean-Pierre Hubaux

Professor

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Lausanne, Switzerland

Phone: +41 21-693-2627

Fax: +41 21-693-6610

Email: Jean-Pierre.Hubaux@epfl.ch

 

Sunghyun Choi

Assistant Professor

Seoul National University

Seoul, Korea

Phone: +82 2-880-1753

Fax: +82 2-887-1753

Email: schoi@snu.ac.kr