Thursday, October 1, 2015

dmanet Digest, Vol 92, Issue 1

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Today's Topics:

1. SoCG 2016: Call for papers - 32nd International Symposium on
Computational Geometry (Sándor Fekete)
2. 2nd CfP: SCSS 2016 (Temur Kutsia)
3. TRISTAN 2016 - Call for Abstracts (Niels Agatz)
4. Deadline extension: ICDT 2016 || February 21 - 25, 2016 -
Lisbon, Portugal (Cristina Pascual)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2015 18:39:14 +0200
From: Sándor Fekete <s.fekete@tu-bs.de>
To: "dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de" <dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de>
Subject: [DMANET] SoCG 2016: Call for papers - 32nd International
Symposium on Computational Geometry
Message-ID: <6733CD5E-54C6-4C7C-91B1-5BC6577E5D27@tu-bs.de>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

*********************************************************************************************
Call for Papers
32nd International Symposium on
Computational Geometry (SoCG)
Boston, June 14-18, 2016
http://socg2016.cs.tufts.edu

*********************************************************************************************

The 32nd International Symposium on Computational Geometry (SoCG) will be held in
Boston, MA, as part of Computational Geometry Week. SoCG will be collocated
with the 48th Symposium on the Theory of Computing (STOC), which will be held
June 18-21, 2016. Making use of this collocation, it is intended to hold joint
workshops with STOC (at the conference hotel of STOC) on June 18, and
coordinate other aspects of the program where appropriate.

We invite submissions of high-quality papers that describe original research on
computational problems in a geometric setting, in particular their algorithmic
solutions, implementation issues, applications, and mathematical foundations.
The program committee intends to interpret the scope of the conference
broadly, and will seriously consider all papers that are of significant
interest to the computational geometry research community.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

* Design, analysis, and implementation of geometric algorithms and data structures;
lower bounds on the computational complexity of geometric problems;

* Mathematical, numerical, and algebraic issues arising in the formulation, analysis,
implementation, and experimental evaluation of geometric algorithms and heuristics;
discrete and combinatorial geometry; computational topology;

* Novel algorithmic applications of geometry in computer graphics, geometric modeling,
computer-aided design and manufacturing, scientific computing, geographic
information systems, database systems, robotics, computational biology, machine
learning, sensor networks, medical imaging, combinatorial optimization,
statistical analysis, discrete differential geometry, theoretical computer science,
graph drawing, pure mathematics, and other fields.

Important Dates
============
* November 27, 2015: Paper abstracts (at most 300 words) due (23:59, UTC-9)
* December 4, 2015: Paper submissions due (23:59, UTC-9)
* February 12, 2016: Notification of acceptance/rejection of papers
* March 24, 2016: Final versions of accepted papers due
* June 14-18, 2016: Symposium in Boston

There will be *no* extension of abstract and paper submission deadlines; late
submissions will not be considered.


Program committee
=================
* Mohammad Ali Abam (Sharif University, Iran)
* Nina Amenta (University of California at Davis, USA)
* Ulrich Bauer (TU Munich, Germany)
* Sergio Cabello (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia)
* Jean Cardinal (Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)
* Eric Colin de Verdiere (Ecole normale superieure, Paris and CNRS, France)
* Sandor Fekete (co-chair, TU Braunschweig, Germany)
* Marc Glisse (Inria, France)
* David Gu (Stony Brook University, USA)
* Matias Korman (Tohoku University, Japan)
* Anna Lubiw (co-chair, University of Waterloo, Canada)
* Wolfgang Mulzer (FU Berlin, Germany)
* Joseph O'Rourke (Smith College, USA)
* Jeff M. Phillips (University of Utah, USA)
* Micha Sharir (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
* Takeshi Tokuyama (Tohuku University, Japan)
* Geza Toth (Renyi Institute, Hungary)
* Kevin Verbeek (TU Eindhoven, Netherlands)
* Yusu Wang (Ohio State University, USA)
* Emo Welzl (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
* Chee Yap (New York University, USA)

Local organizing committee
==========================
Greg Aloupis, Tufts University
Diane Souvaine, Tufts University
Csaba Toth, California State University Northridge

Publication and Awards
======================
Final versions of accepted papers will be published by LIPIcs (Leibniz
International Proceedings in Informatics) in the symposium proceedings. An
author of each accepted paper will be expected to attend the Symposium and give
a presentation (approximately 20 minutes) of the paper. Authors of a selection
of papers from the conference will be invited to submit extended versions of
their papers to special issues of "Discrete and Computational Geometry" and
"Journal of Computational Geometry". There will be a best paper award. A best
student presentation award will also be given based on the quality of the
presentation by a student during the conference.

Paper Submission Guidelines
===========================
Submissions must be formatted in accordance with the LIPIcs proceedings
guidelines and not exceed 15 pages including title-page and references, but
possible excluding a clearly marked appendix (further described below). LIPIcs
typesetting instructions can be found at
http://www.dagstuhl.de/en/publications/lipics and the lipics.cls LaTeX style at
http://drops.dagstuhl.de/styles/lipics/lipics-authors.tgz. Final proceedings
versions of accepted papers must be formatted using the same rules but without
the appendix. See http://drops.dagstuhl.de/portals/extern/index.php?semnr=15005
for the proceedings of 2015. Submissions deviating from the above guidelines
will be rejected without consideration of their merits.

In order to encourage submission from both theory and practice, authors should
clearly identify the main merits of the paper by choosing one of the following
categories.
(T) Contributions to the theory of computational geometry
(P) Contributions to practical aspects of computational geometry
(B) Contributions to both theory and practice
There is no preassigned quota and there will not be separate tracks; the only
purpose is to help the PC in focusing on the main strengths of papers. Authors
should assign these categories by checking one or two of the appropriate boxes
on the easychair submission page.

After the title, authors and abstract, the main body of the submission should
begin with a precise statement of the problem considered, a succinct summary of
the results obtained (emphasizing the significance, novelty, and potential
impact of the research), and a clear comparison with related work. The
remainder of the submission should provide sufficient detail to allow the
Program Committee to evaluate the validity, quality, and relevance of the
contribution. Clarity of presentation is very important; the whole submission
should be written carefully, taking into consideration that it will be read and
evaluated by both experts and non-experts, often under tight time constraints.
All details needed to convince the Program Committee of the validity of the
results should be provided, and supporting materials (including proofs of
theoretical claims and experimental details) that do not fit in the 15-page
limit should be given in an appendix. The appendix should not be a full version
of the paper. It will be read by the program committee members at their
discretion and will not be published as part of the proceedings. Thus, the
submission should be able to stand on its own when references to the appendix
are deleted or replaced by references to an extended version of the paper.
If an appendix was used at the time of submission, authors are strongly
encouraged to post a full version of their paper on some online repository
(such as the arXiv) after acceptance.

Results previously published in another conference proceedings cannot be
submitted. Simultaneous submissions of the results to another conference with
published proceedings are not allowed. Exempted are workshop or conference
handouts containing short abstracts. Results that have already been accepted
(with or without revision) for publication by a journal, at the time of their
submission to the conference, will not be allowed. A paper submitted to a
journal but not yet accepted to a journal can be submitted to the conference.
In such cases, the authors must mention this in the submission appendix and
clearly identify the status of the journal submission on November 27, 2015.

Paper Submission
================
All submissions must be made electronically; see the EasyChair SoCG2016 web
page https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=socg2016 for detailed
submission instructions.


------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2015 19:44:12 +0200
From: Temur Kutsia <kutsia@risc.jku.at>
To: dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de
Subject: [DMANET] 2nd CfP: SCSS 2016
Message-ID: <560587EC.9020803@risc.jku.at>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed

=====================

Second Call for Papers

=====================

SCSS 2016

The 7th International Symposium on
Symbolic Computation in Software Science

Ochanomizu University, Tokyo, Japan
March 28 - 31, 2016

http://www.i-eos.org/conferences/SCSS2016
Submissions to https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scss2016


Important Dates
---------------
November 13, 2015: Abstract submission
November 20, 2015: Paper submission
January 5, 2016: Notification
March 28-31, 2016: SCSS 2016 in Ochanomizu University, Tokyo

Invited Speakers
----------------
- Peter Paule (Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria)
- Jacques Fleuriot (University of Edinburgh, UK)

Tutorial
--------
There will be tutorial lectures on symbolic computation.
- Tetsu Yamaguchi and colleagues (Maple Soft)
- Xavier Dahan (Ochanomizu University, Japan)

Scope
--------
The purpose of SCSS 2016 is to promote research on theoretical and
practical
aspects of symbolic computation in software science. The symposium
provides a
forum for active dialog between researchers from several fields of computer
algebra, algebraic geometry, algorithmic combinatorics, computational
logic,
and software analysis and verification.

SCSS 2016 solicits regular papers on all aspects of symbolic computation
and
their applications in software science. The topics of the symposium
include,
but are not limited to the following:
- automated reasoning
- algorithm (program) synthesis and/or verification
- formal methods for the analysis of network and system security
- termination analysis and complexity analysis of algorithms (programs)
- extraction of specifications from algorithms (programs)
- related theorem proving methods and techniques
- proof carrying code
- generation of inductive assertion for algorithm (programs)
- algorithm (program) transformations
- formalization and computerization of knowledge (maths, medicine,
economy, etc.)
- component-based programming
- computational origami
- query languages (in particular for XML documents)
- semantic web and cloud computing

Program Chair
-------------
James Davenport (University of Bath, UK)

Honorary Chair
---------------
Bruno Buchberger (Johannes Kepler University, Austria)

General Chair
-------------
Tetsuo Ida (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

Program Committee
-----------------
Kenichi Asai (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
Adel Bouhoula (Carthage University, Tunisia)
Changbo Chen (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
Matthew England (Coventry University, UK)
Jacques Garrigue (Nagoya University, Japan)
Cezary Kaliszyk (University of Innsbruck, Austria)
Yukiyoshi Kameyama (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
Michael Kohlhase (Jacobs University, Germany)
Temur Kutsia (Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
Assia Mahboubi (Inria, France)
Yasuhiko Minamide (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
Yoshihiro Mizoguchi (Kyushu University, Japan)
Julien Narboux (Strasbourg University, France)
Renaud Rioboo (ENSIIE, France)
Tateaki Sasaki (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
Dongming Wang (Beihang University and CNRS, China and France)
Stephen Watt (University of Waterloo, Canada)
Kazuhiro Yokoyama (Rikkyo University, Japan)

Local Arrangement Committee
---------------------------
Kenichi Asai (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
Houssem Chatbri (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
Fadoua Ghourabi (Ochanomizu University, Japan) (Chair)
Sosuke Moriguchi (Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan)
Akira Terui (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

Submission
----------
Submission is via EasyChair:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scss2016

Submissions of regular research papers are invited. Regular research papers
must not exceed 12 pages in the EasyChair LaTeX Class format
(www.easychair.org/publications/easychair.zip), with up to 3 additional
pages
for technical appendices.

Publication
----------
The proceedings of SCSS 2016 will be published in the EasyChair
Proceedings in
Computing (EPiC).

After the symposium, we will have a combined special issue of the
Journal of
Symbolic Computation on SCSS 2014 & 2016. The full version of selected
papers
at SCSS 2014 & 2016 will be considered for the publication of the
special issue
subjected to the normal peer review process of the journal. The submission
deadline of the special issue will be 2 months after the symposium.


------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2015 20:45:42 +0000
From: Niels Agatz <nagatz@rsm.nl>
To: "dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de" <dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de>
Subject: [DMANET] TRISTAN 2016 - Call for Abstracts
Message-ID:
<E9C74C9F0CBBE84994C9B689C92D66BC896E2AC5@stff-mb11.staff.eur.nl>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to invite you to participate in the ninth Triennial Symposium on Transportation Analysis (TRISTAN IX). TRISTAN is an international scientific conference that provides a high-quality forum for the presentation of mathematical models, methodologies and computational results, and for the exchange of ideas and scientific discussions on advanced applications and technologies in transportation. TRISTAN IX will be held June 13 through 17, 2016, on the island of Aruba.
We hope to welcome you at TRISTAN 2016.

Local organizing committee: Andreas Hegyi (chair), Bart van Arem, Adam Pel, Niels Agatz, Luuk Veelenturf, Alfredo Nunez, Nicole Fontein, SImon Goede, Jeroen van der Gun and Yufei Yuan

Abstract submission:
Please submit your extended abstract of at most 4 pages via Easychair: http://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tristan2016

Keynotes Speakers:
David Watling, Centenary Professor of Transport Analysis / Postgraduate Research Tutor, University of Leeds
Martin Savelsbergh, James C. Edenfield Chair and Professor at the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial & Systems Engineering, Georgia Tech
Cathy Macharis, Professor at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Mobility, Logistics and Automotive Technology Research Centre

Important dates:
15-11-2015 - Abstract submission deadline (extended deadline)
01-02-2016 - Notification of acceptance
01-04-2016 - Registration deadline for presenters

Registration: regular, non presenting student
Early: $795, $675
Late: $925, $805

Registration includes all sessions, welcome reception, 5 lunches, coffee breaks, conference dinner and social program

Further information can be found on the website: www.tristan-symposium.org<http://www.tristan-symposium.org>

------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Sat, 26 Sep 2015 10:44:49 +0200
From: Cristina Pascual<cris.pascual.gonzalez@gmail.com>
To: dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de
Subject: [DMANET] Deadline extension: ICDT 2016 || February 21 - 25,
2016 - Lisbon, Portugal
Message-ID: <201509260844.t8Q8imbL013878@smtp.upv.es>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii


INVITATION:

=================
The submission deadline is October 19, 2015.
Please consider to contribute to and/or forward to the appropriate groups the following opportunity to submit and publish original scientific results to:
- ICDT 2016, The Eleventh International Conference on Digital Telecommunications
Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit extended article versions to one of the IARIA Journals: http://www.iariajournals.org
=================


============== ICDT 2016 | Call for Papers ===============

CALL FOR PAPERS, TUTORIALS, PANELS

ICDT 2016, The Eleventh International Conference on Digital Telecommunications

General page: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2016/ICDT16.html

Submission page: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2016/SubmitICDT16.html

Event schedule: February 21 - 25, 2016 - Lisbon, Portugal

Contributions:
- regular papers [in the proceedings, digital library]
- short papers (work in progress) [in the proceedings, digital library]
- ideas: two pages [in the proceedings, digital library]
- extended abstracts: two pages [in the proceedings, digital library]
- posters: two pages [in the proceedings, digital library]
- posters: slide only [slide-deck posted at www.iaria.org]
- presentations: slide only [slide-deck posted at www.iaria.org]
- demos: two pages [posted at www.iaria.org]
- doctoral forum submissions: [in the proceedings, digital library]

Proposals for:
- mini symposia: see http://www.iaria.org/symposium.html
- workshops: see http://www.iaria.org/workshop.html
- tutorials: [slide-deck posed on www.iaria.org]
- panels: [slide-deck posed on www.iaria.org]

Submission deadline: October 19, 2015

Sponsored by IARIA, www.iaria.org
Extended versions of selected papers will be published in IARIA Journals: http://www.iariajournals.org
Print proceedings will be available via Curran Associates, Inc.: http://www.proceedings.com/9769.html
Articles will be archived in the free access ThinkMind Digital Library: http://www.thinkmind.org

The topics suggested by the conference can be discussed in term of concepts, state of the art, research, standards, implementations, running experiments, applications, and industrial case studies. Authors are invited to submit complete unpublished papers, which are not under review in any other conference or journal in the following, but not limited to, topic areas.

All tracks are open to both research and industry contributions, in terms of Regular papers, Posters, Work in progress, Technical/marketing/business presentations, Demos, Tutorials, and Panels.

Before submission, please check and comply with the editorial rules: http://www.iaria.org/editorialrules.html

ICDT 2016 Topics (for topics and submission details: see CfP on the site)

Call for Papers: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2016/CfPICDT16.html

============================================================

SIGNAL: Signal processing in telecommunications
Signal processing theory and practice; Image and multidimensional signal processing; Signal filter design and structures; Multirate filtering, filter banks, and adaptive filters; Fast signal processing algorithms; Nonlinear signals and systems; Nonuniform transformation; 2D nonuniform DFT; Fast algorithm of NDFT; Advanced image/video coding; Advanced prediction techniques; Signal detection and reconstruction; Spectral estimation and time-frequency analysis; Higher order spectrum analysis; Parameter estimation; Array signal processing; Statistical signal analysis; Signal and system modeling; Cyclostationary signal analysis; Active noise control, active noise reduction and echo cancellation; Psychoacoustics and room acoustics; Signal processing for music; Binaural systems and multidimensional signal systems; Geophysical and seismic signal processing; Nonlinear interpolation/resampling; Extensions to wavelet based coding (x-lets); Low complexity image/video compression; Multipl!
e r
esolution signal processing; New approach to digital signal processing; Compression of random data; Recompression of compressed data; 2D projection of 3D data; Stereo data matching; Emerging applications requiring new compression tools; Unified compression and recognition; H.264 and latest video coding standards; Latest audio coding standards

DATA: Data processing
Data transmission and reception mechanisms and techniques; Enhanced tools for video data integrity; Data mining, filtering, and reporting; Secure data transmission; Transmission media and data encoding; Text reading devices (super-pen, pen-elite, reading-pen); Scanned and generated lossy (progressive) multi-page text; (Visually) lossless mechanisms; Pricing data transmission; Differential data transmission systems; Data transmission equipments and transmission rates; Delay-constrained data transmission; Undersea and satellite data transmission techniques; Performance evaluation of data transmission; Multicast data transmission; High speed data transmission; Data transmission control; Integrity and privacy in data transmission; Data transmission standards

AUDIO: Audio transmission and reception systems
Audio transmission and reception systems and devices; Digital audio transmission signal processing; Audio transmission over Internet; Audio Multiplexing Transmission Systems; Stereo audio transmission signal; Digital infrared audio transmission; Multi-stream and multi-path audio transmission; Wireless-compressed digital audio transmission; Perceptual coding for audio transmission and storage; Laser audio transmission; Synchronizing video and audio transmission; Wide-band audio transmission; Index-frame audio transmission; Digital audio transmission rights; Noise in wireless audio transmission; Audio tools and products; Standards

VOICE: Voice over packet networks
Planning and implementing voice networks and systems; Voice transmission systems; Voice transmission performance; Quality real-time voice transmission; Metrics for quality of voice transmission; Stereophonic voice transmission systems; Header Compression for VoIP over WLAN; Voice over IP solution for mobile radio interoperability; VoIP over cable TV networks; VoIP over Wi-Max

VIDEO: Video, conferencing, telephony
Digital video; Video coding formats (ITU-T, SMPTE 421M, AVS-China); Video coders and decoders; Profiles, latency, intermediate formats; Video surveillance and privacy; Video feature requirements; Network video recorders; Graceful degradation of archive video; Video data integrity (error detection, tamper resistance); Alarm events for voice content (motion detection, object tracking, face recognitions); Coding efficiency and distributed video coding; Compression and scrambling; Enhanced tools for video data integrity; Multiple reference pictures; Intra-layer and inter-layer prediction; Fading prediction and loop filter; Video with compression errors; Viewing distance and perceptual quality; Video quality models; Omnidirectional video; 3D video; Video standardization encoding; Texture synthesizer

IMAGE: Image producing, sending, and mining
Model-based progressive image transmission; Wireless image transmission; Computer generated images; Image security, scrambling, and regions of interest; Timing requirements for image transmission; Transmission of still and moving images; Protocols for low bit rate; Error-prone image transmission; Energy efficient image transmission; Multi-technology image formation; Devices for image capturing and processing (cams, web-cams, etc.); Scanning and sampling, quantization and halftoning, color reproduction; Image representation and rendering, display and printing systems; Image quality assessment; Image search and sorting, video indexing and editing; Integration of images and video with other media; Image authentication and watermarking; Image storage, retrieval and multimedia; Image and video databases; Generic coding of moving pictures; Media stream packetization; Modes for archival playback; Image-based applications; Standard for image processing; Image analysis and segmentati!
on; Image filtering, restoration an
d enhancement; Image representation and modeling; Pattern recognition

SPEECH: Speech producing and processing
Tooling, Architectures, Components and Standards; Voice modulation, frequencies; Linguistics, Phonology and Phonetics; Discourse and Dialogue; Speech analysis, synthesis, coding, and recognition; Speech enhancement and noise reduction; Speech features, production, and perception; Speech Coding and Transmission; Speech Signal Processing; Spoken Language Generation and Synthesis; Speech QoS Enhancement; Speaker Characterization and Recognition; Spoken Language; Resources and Annotation; Spoken/Multi-modal Dialogue Technology and Systems; Spoken Language Information Extraction/Retrieval; Speech Transmission Technology for the Aged and Disabled; Audio-Visual Speech Processing; Biomedical Applications of Speech Analysis; Spoken document retrieval; Speech Processing in a Packet; Network Environment; Automatic Speech Recognition in the Context of Mobile Communications; Human Factors in Speech and Communication Systems; Automatic speech recognition and understanding technology; Spee!
ch to text systems; Spoken dialog s
ystems; Multilingual language processing; New Applications of Spoken Language Technology and Systems

IPTV: IP/Mobile TV
IPTV applications and middleware; On-demand television; Interactive TV; Broadcast TV data; Broadcast content formats; Stereo and 3D TV; TVoDSL; Television archiving; IPTV broadcasting; IPTV-aware devices; IPTV regulatory issues and copyrights; IPTV network infrastructure; IPTV monitoring and management; I[P]TV usage fees; IPTV Personalization and QoS Implications

MULTI: Multicast/Broadcast Triple-Quadruple-play
Scalable video/audio coding; Multiplexing video/audio/data; Multimedia terminals; Multimedia systems and protocols; PSTN modems and interfaces; Facsimile terminals; Direct broadcast satellite; Terrestrial broadcast television; Cable modems; Universal media access; Format compatibility; Media support platforms; VoIP Quality for Triple Play; Testing triple-play services; Triple-play data encryption; Triple-play services

CONTENT: Production, distribution
Content injection, cashing, storage, and distribution; Producing and transmitting streaming content; Content localization services; Content and customers profiles; Documenting and content authoring; Authorizing topic-based content; Content customization and metadata; On-demand content; Content retrieval from archives (alarm-based, time stamp-based); Content management solutions and systems; Unstructured content environment; Multi-channel content delivery/publishing strategies; Content reuse

HXSIP: H-series towards SIP
SIP and H-xxx architectures and logical components; Instant messages and presence; Management of QoS in SIP and H-xxx environments; Basic SIP building blocks; Security and firewalls with SIP and H-xxx series; Service creation and telephony services with SIP and H-xxx; Multimedia conferencing with SIP and H-xxx; SIP application scenarios; SIP (auto)configuration; SIP and H-xxx beyond VoIP; Leveraging SIP for Global Enterprise Roaming; SIP, H-xxx and 3GPP; Emergency Calling in SIP and H-xxx; Advanced SIP and H-xxx applications and services; SIP and H-xxx on Cable Networks; SIP and H-xxx devices; SIP and h-xxx deployment experience; End-to-end SIP and H-xxx communications; SIP/H.323 Interworking Function for real time communications

MULTE: Multimedia Telecommunications
Frameworks, architectures, systems for delivering voices, audio, and data; Methodologies, technologies, procedures and mechanisms; IMT-2000 concepts; IMS concepts (IP Multimedia Systems); Bluetooth and WLAN coexistence on handsets; Packet-based multimedia communication systems; Converging technology for voice and data networks; Accessibility features for unpaired users; Confidentiality for audiovisual services; Multimedia transmission performance; Multiplexing and synchronization; Directory services for multimedia; Computation complexity and costs (multiple simultaneous decoders); Coding efficiency (embedded, bit-plane, arithmetic); Compatibility between Analog/DVD and networks; IP4/IP6 transition and NAT; QoS/SLA, perceptual QoS, and formal visual tests; Temporal and spatial scalability; Pre-processing and predictive coding; Coding with regions-of-interest; Secure transcoding; Computation power and resolution; Transform and quantization; Entropy coding; Lossless and lossy c!
ompression; Transmission in noisy e
nvironments; Voice/video/data in 4G; Specialized medical applications; Medical imaging and communications networks; MPEG for endoscopy, microscopy, radiology, surgery; Medical archiving systems; Digital devices for image capturing (microscope, stethoscope); Digital equipments and digital cinema; Digital signature protection

MOBILE: Mobile technologies
3G, 4G, 5G: UMTS, HSPA, HSUPA, HSDPA, HSOPA, WiMAX, UWB. LTE, All-IP LTE 4G and beyond; Seamless handover engineering; Cognitive radio; Mobile video surveillance; Pervasive/ubiquitous/mobile systems; Security and privacy issues for mobile and wireless systems; Mobile ad hoc networks

MEDMAN: Control and management of multimedia telecommunication
Video codec-aware of packets; Monitoring via guard on patrol, central station, forensic analysis; Managing single domestic licensing and granted patent pool for compressions; End-to-end quality monitoring/management; Perceived/offered quality: video-only, audio-only, audio-video; In-service monitoring of voice/video/data services; Real-time distributed imagery management systems; Performance in voice/video/data systems; Distributed multimedia service management; Mobile multimedia network management; Multi-point, multicast services management; Deployment of multimedia services; Network management models and architectures; Billing and security for multimedia services; Network measurement/monitoring for multimedia services

SARP: Software architecture research and practice
Distributed software architecture; Architectural styles and patterns; Architecture refinement and transformation; Software architecture and pervasive systems; Software architecture analysis & testing; Architectural description languages (ADLs); Component-based software architecture; Dynamic software architecture; Self-repairing software architecture; Adaptive software architecture; Aspect-oriented software architecture; Service-oriented architecture [SOA]; Domain specific software architecture [DSSA]; Tools/Environments for software architects; Product-line software architecture; Industrial case studies and reports

STREAM: Data stream processing
Fundamentals on data stream processing; Data stream processing and event stream processing; Continuous query languages; Time management in data stream systems; Aggregated queries support; Query processing with multiple, continuous, rapid, time-varying data streams; Processing frequent itemset discovery queries; Real-time stream data processing; Network-aware operator placement for stream-processing systems; Integrating database queries and Web searches; Scalable Distributed Stream Processing; Optimization of data stream processing; Performance and overhead in data stream processing; QoS adaptation in data stream systems; Adaptive query processing in data stream; Interactive distributed data stream processing and mining; Data stream management systems; Control theory on stream processing; Processing high-speed data streams; Stream processing in production-to-business software; Multi-site cooperative data stream analysis; Grid-based data stream processing; Hyperdatabases for !
P2P data stream processing; Sensor
data stream processing in health monitoring; Processing and sharing data streams in Grid-based P2P infrastructures

TRACK: Tracking computing technologies
Airport security communications technologies; Hazards detection- automatic real-time material/object recognition; Intelligent IP-based sensor networking for homeland security; Real-time intelligence data validation and verification mechanisms; Efficient data integration and mining techniques for NATO countries; Secure distributed storage and data pinning; SATCOM for HLS; Critical aerospace communications systems; HLS for air, land and sea operational environments; Airborne real-time spatial tracking techniques; Bio-authentication sensors and tools; Cyber and physical security of key infrastructure and operations; Protection of Real-time resilient communications network infrastructures; International standards for data schema and data sharing between USA and other countries; Emergency response tools; Prediction of Intent; Standards for Passenger Data Integration; Sharing Addressing and Service Discovery in Auto-configuring MANETs; Exploiting localization and network informati!
on (GPS, INS, GIS, terrain features
, ToA, AoA, SNR, QoS) for improved ad-hoc networking in complex terrain; Advanced indoor and outdoor location-based applications: real-time tracking, multimedia, bidirectional, proactive applications; Location based services based on integrated cellular, ad hoc, RFID, and sensor networks; New positioning techniques in support of location based servcies (indoor, cellular, satellite, hybrid); Geographic Information Systems for supporting location based services; Quality of location data; Integration of Hierarchical Location-Based Routing (HLBR) with Delay- and Disruption-Tolerant Neworks (DTNs); Narrow-band control channels for HLBR; Location-aware (GPS-aware) Internet Browsers for Location-based services

------------------------

ICDT 2016 Committee: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2016/ComICDT16.html
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End of dmanet Digest, Vol 92, Issue 1
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