Workshop on Internet of Vehicles and Vehicles of Internet

Event Dates

Jul 05, 2016 - Jul 05, 2016

Location

Paderborn, Germany

Submission Deadline

Apr 15, 2016

CALL FOR PAPERS

IoV-VoI 2016

First International Workshop on

Internet of Vehicles and Vehicles of Internet

Co-located with ACM MobiHoc 2016

http://www.tech.dmu.ac.uk/~iwagne00/iov-voi2016

05 July 2016

Paderborn, Germany

Driving safety has been the focus of vehicular networking research and

development for the past 15 years. Standardization is mostly complete

with voluntary roll-out starting in Japan. Current generation is based

mostly on broadcasting of beacons.

As we go along, this first generation of vehicular networking

technologies will face challenges in addressing the needs of connected

vehicles and new applications that would go beyond the present day

systems. One such area is automated vehicles where the communication

needs will be twofold: One for cooperatively perceiving the environment,

and the other for collectively deciding on maneuvers. Such connected

autonomous vehicles would not only require reliable group

communications, but also would rely on group intelligence where they may

need to coordinate their actions (as a vehicular cloud) based on some

predefined rules.

Another emerging area is the view of cars as sensor platforms that

monitor the external environment (traffic, pollution, etc) as well as

the internal CAN bus and cabin activities. In this view the cars become

part of an IOV (Internet of Vehicles) and provide useful information not

only to other cars, but also to stakeholders in the Internet (e.g.,

automakers, insurance companies, communications services providers,

content providers, etc). In this view, one can exploit the information

capture, processing and communication resources not only of running

cars, but also of parked cars in the context of smart cities (e.g.,

using vehicles as data capture, storage and delivery instruments). The

information collected will be voluminous (big data) and will offer

important insight, through machine learning, on vehicular grid and smart

city operations. This expanded view will open up new opportunities as

well as new challenges in managing the highly amorphous vehicular

network structure and blending the “Internet of Vehicles” into the

“Vehicles of the Internet” by making vehicular resources an integral

part of the existing infrastructure. In other words, the Vehicular cloud

becomes an entity of its own right and cooperates with edge clouds and

Internet clouds.

Potential topics of the Workshop are:

– Vehicular clouds, group intelligence

– Software defined networking and virtualization for vehicles

– Heterogeneous/hybrid networking techniques for next generation

vehicular communications

– Collective perception techniques for automated vehicles

– Collective decision making for automated vehicles

– Services utilizing resources of vehicles

– Security for connected vehicles

– Positioning and addressing of vehicles

– Use of big data and cloud for automated vehicles

– IoV in the general context of IoT

– Mining big vehicular data for smart city services

– Use of cellular systems for vehicular networking

Paper Submission Guidelines

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Submitted technical papers must be no longer than 6 pages including all figures, tables and references. The submitted paper must be formatted according to the guidelines of ACM Double Column Format submitted electronically in printable pdf form. Accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings published by the ACM. At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register and attend the workshop to present the work.

Important Dates

—————

Paper Submission: 15 April 2016

Notification of Acceptance: 15 May 2016

Camera Ready Deadline: 1 June 2016 (firm)

Workshop: 5 July 2016

Organizing committee

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General Co-chairs

Mario Gerla (UCLA)

Onur Altintas (TOYOTA InfoTechnology Center, Japan)

TPC Chairs

Claudio Casetti (Politecnico di Torino)

Raphael Frank (University of Luxembourg)

Publicity and Web Chair

Isabel Wagner (De Montfort University)

Technical Program Committee

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German Castignani, University of Luxembourg

Jinzhu Chen, General Motors

Pedro d’Orey, NEC Europe Ltd.

Stefan Dietzel, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

David Eckhoff, University of Erlangen

Marco Fiore, National Research Council of Italy

Takeo Fujii, The University of Electro-Communications

Teruo Higashino, Osaka University

Takamasa Higuchi, Toyota InfoTechnology Center

Renato Lo Cigno, University of Trento

Roberto Minerva, Telecom Italia

Yaser P. Fallah, West Virginia University

Panagiotis Pantazopoulos, ICCS

Panagiotis (Panos) Papadimitratos, KTH

Susana Sargento, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Universidade de Aveiro

Björn Scheuermann, Humboldt University of Berlin

Miguel Sepulcre, Universidad Miguel Hernandez de Elche

Hsin-Mu Tsai, National Taiwan University

Kazuya Tsukamoto, Kyushu Institute of Technology

Alexey Vinel, Halmstad University

Wantanee Viriyasitavat, Mahidol University

Andre Weimerskirch, University of Michigan

Matthias Wilhelm, Toyota InfoTechnology Center

Keiichi Yasumoto, Nara Institute of Science and Technology