Workshop Program

All times local (Philadelphia, EDT)

08:00-08:15 Welcoming Remarks
08:15-08:55 Invited Talk-Overview of European Fleetnet Project
08:55-10:15 Session 1
VANET Channel Characteristics and Safety Applications (Session Chair: Mario Gerla)
  • Performance Evaluation of Safety Applications
  • Broadcast Reception Rates and Effects of Priority Access in 802.11-Based Vehicular AdHoc Networks
  • Vehicle-to-vehicle Safety Messaging in DSRC
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:30 Session 2
Security in VANET (Session Chair: Jean-Pierre Hubaux)
  • Detecting and Correcting Malicious Data in VANETs
  • Efficient Attribute Authentication with Applications to Ad Hoc Networks
11:30-12:30 Poster Session (7 posters, listed below)
12:30-13:30 Lunch
13:30-15:20 Session 3
Data Dissemination in VANET Environment (Session Chair: Dave Johnson)
  • DDV: Mobility-Centric Data Dissemination Algorithm for Vehicular Networks
  • PAVAN: A Policy Framework for Availability in Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks
  • A study on the Feasibility of Mobile Gateways for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks
  • Urban Multi-Hop Broadcast Protocols for Inter-Vehicle Communication Systems
15:20-15:30 Break
15:30-17:00 Industry/Government Panel and Discussion

Details of Accepted Papers and Posters
Paper or Poster
Title of Submission Authors (affiliation of first author)
Full Paper Efficient Attribute Authentication with Applications to Ad Hoc Networks Markus Jakobsson (RSA Security), Susanne Wetzel
Full Paper Broadcast Reception Rates and Effects of Priority Access in 802.11-Based Vehicular AdHoc Networks Marc Torrent-Moreno (University of Karlsruhe), Daniel Jiang, Hannes Hartenstein
Full Paper A Study on the Feasibility of Mobile Gateways for Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks Vinod Namboodiri (University of Massachusetts, Amherst), Manish Agarwal, Lixin Gao
Full Paper Detecting and Correcting Malicious Data in VANETs Philippe Golle (PARC), Dan Greene, Jessica Staddon
Full Paper Performance Evaluation of Safety Applications over DSRC Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks Jijun Yin (HRL), Tamer Elbatt, Gavin Yeung, Bo Ryu, Stephen Habermas, Hariharan Krishnan, Timothy Talty
Full Paper PAVAN: A Policy Framework for Availability in Vehicular Ad-Hoc Networks Shahram Ghandeharizadeh (University of Southern California), Shyam Kapadia, Bhaskar Krishnamachari
Full Paper Urban Multi-Hop Broadcast Protocol for Inter-Vehicle Communication Systems Gokhan Korkmaz (The Ohio State University), Eylem Ekici, Fusun Ozguner, Umit Ozguner
Full Paper Vehicle-to-Vehicle Safety Messaging in DSRC Qing Xu (University of California at Berkeley), Tony Mak, Jeff Ko, Raja Sengupta
Full Paper MDDV: Mobility-Centric Data Dissemination Algorithm for Vehicular Networks Hao Wu (Georgia Institute of Technology), Richard Fujimoto, Randall Guensler, Michael Hunter



Poster
Analyzing the Spread of Active Worms over VANET Syed A. Khayam (Michigan State University), Hayder Radha
Poster Towards Real-Time Middleware for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks Barbara Hughes (Trinity College, Dublin), René Meier, Raymond Cunningham, Vinny Cahill
Poster Empirical Determination of Channel Characteristics for DSRC Vehicle-to-vehicle Communication Vikas Taliwal (DaimlerChrylser RTNA), Heiko Mangold, Chi Chen, Daniel Jiang, Raja Sengupta
Poster SPAWN: A Swarming Protocol for vehicular Ad-hoc Wireless Networks Shirshanka Das (UCLA), Alok Nandan, Giovanni Pau, M. Y. Sanadidi, Mario Gerla
Poster A Transmission-Interval and Power-Level Modulation Methodology for Optimizing Inter-Vehicle Communications Huaying Xu (University of California, Riverside), Matthew Barth
Poster Modeling Mobility for Vehicular Ad Hoc Networks Amit Kumar Saha (Rice University), David B. Johnson
Poster An Inter-Vehicle Communicaiton MAC Protocol Supported by Roadside Communication and It's Extension Hiroyuki Daizo (Shizuoka University), Tsutomu Iwahashi, Masaki Bandai, Takashi Watanabe

Full Paper
Each Full Paper will be presented at the Workshop in a 20 minute oral presentation (slides encouraged) with an additional 5 minutes for questions and discussion. 

Poster
Each Poster will be displayed as a part of a Poster Session at the Workshop.

Industry/Government Panelists
Evans Photo
Dr. Joseph B. Evans is a Program Director in the Division of Computer & Network Systems in the Directorate for Computer & Information Science & Engineering at the National Science Foundation.  He is on leave from the University of Kansas, where he is currently a Professor of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science.  His research interests include mobile and wireless networking, pervasive computing systems, high speed networks, and adaptive computing systems.  He has been involved in major national high performance networking testbeds and broadband wireless mobile networking efforts, and has published over 100 journal and conference works.  Dr. Evans received his PhD degree from Princeton University in 1989, is a senior member of the IEEE, and a member of the ACM.  He is also a commercial pilot.
Holfelder Photo
Dr. Wieland Holfelder is Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of DaimlerChrysler Research and Technology North America, Inc. DaimlerChrysler’s Silicon Valley research office focuses on telematics technologies and applications for the North American market.  Prior to DaimlerChrysler, Holfelder worked for two Silicon Valley start-up companies on streaming Internet media as well as for the University of Mannheim, Germany, IBM’s European Networking Center in Heidelberg, Germany and the International Computer Science Institute (ICSI) at the University of California at Berkeley.  Dr. Holfelder holds a Masters in Computer Science and Economics (Dipl. Wirtsch. Inf.) and a Ph.D. (Dr. rer. nat.) in Computer Science both from the University of Mannheim, Germany.
Kawamoto Photo
Masayuki "Mark" Kawamoto is the Chief Technologist of Toyota Technical Center, U.S.A, where he also serves as General Manager of the Technical Research Department.  He received his M.S. degree in Information Science from the Tokyo Institute of Technology.  After joining Toyota Motor Corporation in 1982, he worked in many areas of automotive research and development, including: engine, chassis, brake, and body control systems; navigation systems; and relevant sensor and actuator technology. Since 2001, he has taken a leading role in establishing and promoting Toyota’s frontier research activities in the United States. Kawamoto-san strives to accomplish a key Toyota mission: conducting cutting-edge research in the US and contributing to the US society.