IoTDI 2021 - The 6th ACM/IEEE Conference on Internet of Things Design and Implementation
Topics/Call fo Papers
The organizers of IoTDI 2021 are pleased to announce the organization of IoTDI 2021, and are soliciting high-quality papers for the conference. The ACM/IEEE International Conference on Internet of Things Design and Implementation (IoTDI) is a premier venue on IoT. In 2021, IoTDI will be held for the sixth time, and will be part of CPS-IoT WEEK 2021 being organized in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
A confluence of technological advances marks the advent of a new era. World data volume is growing at an unprecedented pace, much of it from embedded devices. Smart cities are expected to grow, fed by millions of data points from multitudes of human and physical sources. Cyber-attacks grow more nefarious, bringing down physical systems. Social networks are becoming ubiquitous, offering information on physical things. The separation between cyber, physical, and social systems is blurring. Collectively, these developments lead to the emergence of a new field, where the networking and physical realms meet. It is the field of the Internet of Things (IoT). This conference is an interdisciplinary forum to discuss challenges, technologies, and emerging directions in system design and implementation that pertain to IoT. This conference invites researchers and practitioners from academia, industry and government, and accepts original, previously unpublished work on a range of topics related to IoT.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Analytic foundations and theory of IoT
Reliability, security, timeliness, and robustness in IoT systems
Novel protocols and network abstractions
Data streaming architectures and machine learning analytics for IoT
IoT-motivated cyber-physical and Industrial IoT (IIoT) systems
Novel quality requirements and their enforcement mechanisms
Cloud back-ends and resource management for IoT applications
Edge and fog computing
Personal, wearable, and other embedded networked front-ends
Social computing and human-in-the-loop issues
Applications domains (e.g., smart cities, smart health, smart buildings, smart transportation)
Deployment experiences, case studies & lessons learned
Evaluation and testbeds
AI/ML for IoT & Embedded Systems
Energy/Power Management & Harvesting for IoT Platforms
Accepted papers of particular merit will be invited to submit an extended version to the IEEE IoT Journal (IoT-J). For papers reporting results based on experiments with human subjects, appropriate ethics approvals should be demonstrated as part of the submission.
A confluence of technological advances marks the advent of a new era. World data volume is growing at an unprecedented pace, much of it from embedded devices. Smart cities are expected to grow, fed by millions of data points from multitudes of human and physical sources. Cyber-attacks grow more nefarious, bringing down physical systems. Social networks are becoming ubiquitous, offering information on physical things. The separation between cyber, physical, and social systems is blurring. Collectively, these developments lead to the emergence of a new field, where the networking and physical realms meet. It is the field of the Internet of Things (IoT). This conference is an interdisciplinary forum to discuss challenges, technologies, and emerging directions in system design and implementation that pertain to IoT. This conference invites researchers and practitioners from academia, industry and government, and accepts original, previously unpublished work on a range of topics related to IoT.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Analytic foundations and theory of IoT
Reliability, security, timeliness, and robustness in IoT systems
Novel protocols and network abstractions
Data streaming architectures and machine learning analytics for IoT
IoT-motivated cyber-physical and Industrial IoT (IIoT) systems
Novel quality requirements and their enforcement mechanisms
Cloud back-ends and resource management for IoT applications
Edge and fog computing
Personal, wearable, and other embedded networked front-ends
Social computing and human-in-the-loop issues
Applications domains (e.g., smart cities, smart health, smart buildings, smart transportation)
Deployment experiences, case studies & lessons learned
Evaluation and testbeds
AI/ML for IoT & Embedded Systems
Energy/Power Management & Harvesting for IoT Platforms
Accepted papers of particular merit will be invited to submit an extended version to the IEEE IoT Journal (IoT-J). For papers reporting results based on experiments with human subjects, appropriate ethics approvals should be demonstrated as part of the submission.
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2020-09-03 17:11:19