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NSF Critical Infrastructures Workshop Nov. 17-18, 2006 Kannan Ramchandran University of California at Berkeley Current research interests related to workshop.

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Presentation on theme: "NSF Critical Infrastructures Workshop Nov. 17-18, 2006 Kannan Ramchandran University of California at Berkeley Current research interests related to workshop."— Presentation transcript:

1 NSF Critical Infrastructures Workshop Nov. 17-18, 2006 Kannan Ramchandran University of California at Berkeley Current research interests related to workshop theme: Distributed signal processing and coding for wireless sensor networks: architectures, algorithms, and protocols for massively scalable robust networks Robust real-time video transmission over multi-camera wireless surveillance networks Multi-user information and communications theory: constructive designs Peer-to-peer networks: collaborative relaying, networked storage, p2p communication Security: Data-hiding, steganography & compression/encryption: theory and codes

2 Sampling of challenges in monitoring & control of large-scale distributed systems (e.g. power grid) Scaling challenges: What are the scaling laws? Role of decentralized processing? Detection of anomalies: statistical modeling of normal vs. abnormal events How to “in-build” robustness into system architecture to account for dynamics of environment and fragility of low-cost sensor infrastructure? Architectural challenges related to designing the right levels of heterogeneity & co-ordination for optimal operation. Power and bandwidth constraints: due to sensor battery power and shared wireless bandwidth. Addressing delay constraints at multiple scales:  need for operation at multiple time-scales of interest, e.g. need to predict, control, repair, and contain damage quickly and efficiently when event-detection triggers, but  allowing for lenient latencies during “background mode” during non-event-triggered durations. What are the fundamental theories, (decentralized) architectures, (distributed) algorithms and (randomized) protocols needed to realize this?

3 Strategic Issues Clear need to “understand the problem domain” more clearly. Need to work with the domain experts:  What are the statistical models for the data?  What are the sensor noise models?  What is the existing infrastructure that we can leverage in terms of communication, power, computation? Clear need for a multi-disciplinary systems attack that spans not only EE fields like  control, comm. and signal processing (e.g. info theory, coding theory, estimation & detection theory, and control theory)  but also across EE and CS (randomized algorithms, graph theory, p2p networking, parallel computing,cryptography),  economics (game theory), and  operations research (resource optimization, scheduling etc.) Two important system attributes for next-generation systems:  Large-scale and robustness: two attributes that first-generation systems have for the most part not addressed successfully yet.


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