| |
“An Algebraic
Framework for Query Optimization in Sensor Networks"
Friday, February 25, 2005
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Room 404, IS Building
You are invited to meet the speaker before the talk
from 10:30 AM – 11:00
AM in the Large Commons Room of the IS Building
Abstract: Recent advances in wireless
communications and micro-electronics enabled wide deployment
of smart sensor networks. Sensor networks support a broad
range of applications that involves system monitoring
and information tracking (e.g., airport security infrastructure,
monitoring of children in metropolitan areas, product
transition in warehouse networks, fine-grained weather/environmental
measurements, etc.). Such applications require efficient
mechanisms for querying the sensor data and delivering
the query result in a timely manner. Meanwhile, resource
limitations of sensor nodes imply that excessive transmissions
in response to sensor queries can lead to premature network
death.
In this talk we introduce an integrated approach to
sensor query optimization that utilizes performance and
functional trade-offs between query processing schemes
and lower layer transmission protocols. Specifically,
we develop novel cross-layer optimization techniques
that utilize information about how the medium access
control layer operates while processing queries in large
scale sensor environments. The optimizer uses a Data
Transmission Algebra that uniformly captures the structure
of data transmissions, and their constraints and requirements.
Our framework enables both qualitative analysis and quantitative
cost-based optimization of sensor queries. In particular,
we demonstrate efficiency of our approach in vibration-based
Structural Health Monitoring, where sensor network continuously
examines the structure under critical integrity conditions.
Bio: Vladimir Zadorozhny is an Assistant
Professor in Department of Information Science and Telecommunications,
School of Information Sciences, University of Pittsburgh.
He received his Ph.D. in 1993 from the Institute for
Problems of Informatics, Russian Academy of Sciences
in Moscow. Before coming to US he was a Principal Research
Fellow in the Institute of System Programming, Russian
Academy of Sciences. Since 1998 he worked as a Research
Scientist in the University of Maryland Institute for
Advanced Computer Studies at College Park. He joined
University of Pittsburgh in September 2001. Vladimir's
current research interests include scalable architectures
for wide-area environments with heterogeneous information
servers, networked information systems, query optimization
in resource-constrained distributed databases, wireless
data management.
|
|