Wireless Sensor Networks2010HT
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Course plan
Lectures
20 hours of lectures in two 2-day intensive sessions. Seminar discussions of research papers.
Recommended for
PhD students satisfying the prerequisites.
The course was last given
New course.
Goals
To obtain familiarity with the key concepts of wireless sensor
networks, with an emphasis on communication protocols.
Prerequisites
Computer science and engineering or electrical
engineering Masters degree.
Contents
Introduction to Wireless Sensor Networks: principles and applications.
Basics of low-power wireless communication and its implications.
Networking protocols: medium access and routing.
Organization
The course will combine lectures and in-class discussions of research
papers. The specific organization will depend on the number of
participants.
Maximum number of participants around 8, and minimum should be what CUGS
considered worthwhile for reimbursing the costs.
Literature
H. Karl and A. Willig, Protocols and Architectures for Wireless Sensor
Networks, Wiley, May 2005, as an introductory text.
Selected supplementary articles including:
A. Woo, T. Tong, and D. Culler, "Taming the Underlying Challenges of
Reliable Multihop Routing in Sensor Networks", SenSys'03
O. Gnawali, R. Fonseca, K. Jamieson, D. Moss, and P. Levis,
"Collection Tree Protocol", SenSys'09
D. Puccinelli and M. Haenggi, "Reliable Data Delivery in Large-Scale
Low-Power Sensor Networks", in ACM Transactions on Sensor Networks,
2010
Lecturers
Daniele Puccinelli
Examiner
Daniele Puccinelli and Simin Nadjm-Tehrani
Examination
Home assignments on Motes and TinyOS.
Credit
6 points
Organized by
Simin Nadjm-Tehrani
Comments
We need to purchase the platform for the exercise which is estimated to be
16-20 Motes for 8 participants (e.g. CrossBow's TelosB nodes at ~150USD per
node).
RTSLAB will cover the travelling expenses of the lecturer from the course
proceedings. Additional support for the lab platform is requested from
IDA/CUGS.
Page responsible: Director of Graduate Studies