More about HKUST
Scaling Laws for Wireless Sensor Networks
Speaker: Dr. Rong ZHENG Department of Computer Science University of Houston Title: "Scaling Laws for Wireless Sensor Networks" Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 Time: 3:00pm - 4:00pm Venue: Room 3501 (via lift nos. 25/26), HKUST Abstract: Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are best characterized by two types of dominating traffic patterns, namely, one-to-many communication in the control plane and many-to-one communication in the data plane. Scaling law analysis provides fundamental understandings to the limitation of various communication paradigms. In this talk, we summarize our recent results on the asymptotic behavior of data dissemination and data gathering operations in WSNs. In particular, we determine the optimality of sink tree-based relay schemes, the commonly adopted practice in WSNs, in different attenuation regimes. ***************** Biography: Rong Zheng received her Ph.D. degree from the CS department, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign in 2004 and earned her M.E.and B.E. in Electrical Engineering in 1998 and 1996 from Tsinghua University, P.R. China. She is now an assistant professor at the CS department, University of Houston. Her current research interests include resource management and diagnostic of large-scale distributed systems, performance analysis and prototyping of wireless networks, and wireless location tracking. Rong Zheng is the recipient of NSF Career Award in 2006.