ATNAC 2012 7-9th November 2012, Brisbane, Australia

Venue
Traders Hotel : 159 Roma Street, Brisbane, QLD, 4000
Link to venue website

Important Dates
Paper Submission Due       : 1st July 2012 29 July 2012
Review Notification            : 9th September 2012
Camera Ready Submission : 29th September 2012
First Call for Papers
Five student travel grants available (AUD$500 each)
Submit a Paper

Session best paper authors will be invited to submit a paper to the Australian Journal of Electrical and Electronics Engineering June 2013 special issue on telecommunication networks and applications.

Track List

2012 Australasian Telecommunication Networks and Applications Conference (General Track)
Internet Technologies
IPv6 mobility and vehicular networks
Mobile & Wireless Networks
Optical Communications
Wireless Sensor Networks

Tracks

2012 Australasian Telecommunication Networks and Applications Conference (General Track)

Upload a paper for this track here

 

General topics related to networks and applications
Broadband Network Management
Regional and Remote Networks
Next generation network regulation
Communication technology fundamentals

 

Internet Technologies

Upload a paper for this track here

In the current and the envisioned future Internet, a variety of new technologies and applications is emerging. New networking architectures and design concepts are to be developed which consider interactions with the real world, as well as emerging issues like energy-efficiency or socio-economic aspects. A holistic view is necessary which takes into account the network of the Future, the Internet of services, media and enterprise Internet, but also the Internet of Things. However, there are still significant challenges for the theoretical understanding and on the deployment of Internet technologies.

The goal of the Internet technology track is to bring together people from academia and industry and to stimulate discussions on future Internet applications and future wireline and wireless Internet architectures to accelerate their development. We seek papers describing original, previously unpublished research results.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Emerging Technologies:

Virtualization technology and programmability of FI elements
Service-oriented architectures and service composition
Future Internet routing schemes or transport concepts
IPv6 and its derivatives
Economic Traffic Management
Mesh networks, ad-hoc networks, sensor networks, femtocells
Self-configuring and self-optimizing cellular networks
Dynamic Spectrum Access and Cognitive Radio

Emerging Applications:

Content-centric networks
Social networks
Multilevel and location-aware mobile services
Cloud computing
Software as a service
Grid computing
Peer-to-peer networks and overlays
Multimedia support e.g. vehicle-2-X communications
Internet governance

Emerging Issues:

Energy efficiency and energy awareness
Network application awareness
Network management systems and control plane
Coarse-grained QoS solutions for scalable Future Internet services
Quality of Experience
Support of mobility of devices, users, sessions, networks, and services
Security and privacy mechanism
Flexibility to realize new innovations

 

IPv6 mobility and vehicular networks

Upload a paper for this track here

 

Mobility management and topology control
Location-based services and positioning
Micro and macro-mobility
Mobility, location and handoff management
Mobile and wireless IPv6
IPv6 security
Wireless broadband mobile access
ad hoc and sensor networks
Wireless multicasting
Wireless mesh networks
Topology control in wireless networks
Physical and MAC layer issues
IPv6 GeoNetworking
Cross-layer design and optimization for vehicular networks and cognitive networks
Security issues for vehicular and cognitive networks

 

Mobile & Wireless Networks

Upload a paper for this track here

The field of mobile and wireless networks is a rapidly evolving area. Recent advances in technologies for emerging mobile and wireless networks, including mobile ad hoc networks, vehicular networks, B3G/4G cellular networks, among others, have the potential to enable many new mobile and wireless services and applications that can profoundly impact our lives in positive ways.

The goal of this track is to provide a forum for the presentation of new advances, ideas, and solutions from theoretical, experimental, and applied research to address specific new challenges and emerging issues concerned with this field. We seek papers describing original, previously unpublished research results.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Wireless access and routing protocols
Cross-layer design optimisation
Green and sustainable networking
Nature and bio-inspired approaches to networking
Network-based mobile positioning and tracking systems
Cognitive and cooperative principles for networking
Inter-working, integration, and convergence issues
Mobile social and ambient networks
Mobile and fixed wireless broadband access networks
QoS provisioning and resource management
Terminal and network mobility
Traffic engineering, congestion and admission control
Techno-economic analysis and business models for emerging networks
Novel network-enabled applications and services
Networking standards and regulations
Security and privacy issues

Optical Communications

Upload a paper for this track here

Optical communication technologies will continue to be increasingly important in supporting the future Internet's expected scaling requirements of billions of users,their IT needs and aggregated huge bandwidths. Over the last two decades, optical communication technologies have increased the transmission capacity per fiber by severalorders of magnitude, achieving Tbit/s transmissions. If the data traffic continues to increase at the current progressional rates, a further increase in thetransmission capacity of several orders of magnitude will be needed over the coming decades. This implies that future optical systems and networks should be able tosupport capacities well over Peta bit/s. However, the current technologies have already begun to reveal several fundamental limits; the electronic speed limit, theShannon and quantum limit, and the IP and energy bottleneck. The future technologies must overcome these limits ensuring sustainable growth of network traffic.The optical communications theme aims to provide a forum for the presentation and discussion of significant progress of research,development and applications of cutting-edge technologies in optical communication devices, subsystems, systems and networks.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Next Generation Broadband Access Networks, Subsystems and Systems

Optical Ethernet, EPON/GPON, 10Gb/s Ethernet, 100Gb/s Ethernet
WDM Access Networks, WDM-PON
Wired/wireless convergence, Telecom/broadcast convergence, IPTV
Hybrid optical-wireless access networks, Radio-over-fiber
Higher order modulations and OFDM in optical access networks
Fiber-to-the-Home/Fiber-to-the-Curve (FTTH/FTTC)
Grid/cloud computing over optical networks
Green Internet

Next Generation Optical Networks, Subsystems and Systems

Optical core network architecture, design, control, and management
Optical cross-connect/add-drop multiplexers, ROADM, and switching subsystems
Optical packet/burst/flow switching networks and subsystems
Large capacity optical transmission, WDM, OTDM
OFDM, higher order modulations and advanced modulation formats in photonics
Energy efficient optical networks
Impairments mitigations and performance monitoring techniques
Digital signal processing in photonics systems
Free Space optical communications

Optical Fiber, Components, and Devices

Fiber design, characterization, fabrication, installation,, and maintenance
Photonics Crystal fibers
Polymer/non-silica fibers
Optical active device and modules
Optical passive device and modules
Fiber Bragg grating, fiber lasers/amplifiers, MUX/DEMUX, and demodulators
Silicon photonics
Optical MEM

Wireless Sensor Networks

Upload a paper for this track here

The field of wireless sensor networks is now getting more and more mature, but new design concepts, experimental and theoretical findings, and applications continue to emerge at a rapid pace. Furthermore, there are still significant challenges for the theoretical understanding and practical application of sensornetworks.

The goal of the sensor networking track is to bring together people from academia and industry who have interest in the area of wireless ad hoc and sensor networks. We seek papers describing original, previously unpublished research results.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Networking protocols: MAC, routing, transport, next generation
Cooperative communication approaches
Cross-layer design and optimization
Broadcasting, multicasting, geocasting
Quality-of-service, reliability and fault tolerance, coverage and connectivity
Security
Supplementary services: localization, time synchronization
Body sensor networks
Operating Systems and Software
Middleware and Macroprogramming
Information and query processing
Prototypes, field experiments, testbeds
Theoretical limits, network scaling
Novel applications