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End-System Coordination for Collaborative and Cognitive Networking in a Multi-Radio Environment
Speaker: Dr. Qian Zhang Microsoft Research Asia Topic: "End-System Coordination for Collaborative and Cognitive Networking in a Multi-Radio Environment" Date: Wednesday, 4 May 2005 Time: 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm Venue: Room 3464 (Conference Room, via lift nos. 25/26) HKUST ABSTRACT: The last decade has witnessed an explosion in wireless technologies, including WiFi, WiMax, UWB, 3G, Bluetooth, etc. These technologies will co-exist in the future to form a multi-radio wireless system providing different service abilities to the user applications. With the proliferation of wireless enabled devices, and especially multi-radio/ multi-band enabled devices, much attention has been paid to the desire to ensure "always best connected" system. Collaborative and cognitive networking (CCN) is proposed to make the devices cognitive to the environment and adapt to the best performance by end-system collaboration. After introducing the scope of CCN, I will present two concrete technologes, i.e., ProFITS and SoftMAC. ProFITS targets at seamless roaming across heterogeneous wireless networks such as wireless wide area network (WWAN) and wireless local area network (WLAN). A novel seamless and proactive end-to-end mobility management system is presented, which can maintain the connections based on the end-to-end principle by incorporating an intelligent network status detection mechanism. Two core components of this system, i.e., connection manager (CM) and virtual connectivity (VC), are introduced in detail. A prototype system is built to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed solution. To address the VoIP delivery over multi-hop networks, Layer 2.5 SoftMAC that resides between the 802.11 MAC layer and IP layer is proposed to coordinate the real-time and best-effort packet transmission among neighboring nodes in a multi-hop wireless network. Distributed admission control, rate control, and non-preemptive priority queueing is introduced to regulate the contention in the multi-hop system. We implement our proposed SoftMAC as a Windows Network Driver Interface Specification (NDIS) driver over Network Interface Card (NIC) driver, and build a multi-hop wireless network testbed with 32 wireless nodes equipped with 802.11 a/b/g combo cards. Our evaluation and testing results demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed software solution. ************************* Biography: Qian Zhang received the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from Wuhan University, China, in 1994, 1996, and 1999, respectively, all in computer science. She started her career with Microsoft Research Asia (by then Microsoft Research China), Beijing, China, in July 1999 firstly as an associated researcher, promoted to researcher in 2001, and became the research manager of the Wireless and Networking Group at the end of 2004. Dr. Zhang has published about 90 refereed papers in international leading journals and key conferences in the areas of wireless/Internet multimedia system, wireless communications and networking, and overlay system. She is the inventor of about 30 pending patents; in particular she made key contributions in technology devolvement in multimedia delivery over wireless and Internet, peer-to-peer multimedia distribution, seamless roaming across heterogeneous wireless networks, and multi-hop wireless system. Her current research interest includes seamless roaming across different wireless networks, multimedia delivery over wireless, Internet, next-generation wireless system, P2P system and multi-hop wireless networks. She also participated many activities in the IETF ROHC (Robust Header Compression) WG group for TCP/IP header compression. Dr. Zhang is a member of the Visual Signal Processing and Communication Technical Committee and the Multimedia System and Application Technical Committee of the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society. She is also a member and chair of QoSIG of the Multimedia Communication Technical Committee of the IEEE Communications Society. Dr. Zhang is the Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technologies. She is now also serving as Guest Editor for special issue on wireless video in IEEE wireless Communication Magazine. Dr. Zhang has received TR 100 (MIT Technology Review) world's top young innovator award for her contribution in improved roaming between cellular networks and created better compression and delivery technologies for wireless multimedia. She also received the Best Asia Pacific (AP) Young Researcher Award elected by IEEE Communication Society in year 2004.