Cultivating Smart and Connected Communities: Design of Resilient Smart Cities
On Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2018, Prof. Narayan Mandayam, ECE Dept., Rutgers University, will give a presentation on Cultivating Smart and Connected Communities: Design of Resilient Smart Cities. The meeting will be held at Futurewei Technologies (2nd floor) in Bridgewater, NJ. The presentation starts at 4:30 pm. A buffet will be provided after the presentation (around 5:45 pm).
Cultivating Smart and Connected Communities: Design of Resilient Smart Cities
Prof. Narayan Mandayam, ECE Dept., Rutgers University
Abstract - Smart city operation requires the integration of critical infrastructures, such as transportation systems, wireless systems, water networks and power grids. These critical infrastructures will share energy, computing, wireless services, economic investments and most importantly users and operating personnel. These infrastructures typically face daily wear and tear; natural disasters, such as storms and earthquakes; and potential malicious attacks, such as cyber-attacks on the power grid or internet. Further, failures can spread from one infrastructure to others, and lead to cascading effects. Protecting smart cities from failures and damage requires making critical infrastructures resilient and reallocating resources toward recovery efforts. Further, understanding and influencing the behavior of people (end-users) is also essential since they use and share the different critical infrastructures. In this talk, using models from game theory (dynamic games and Colonel Blotto games) and prospect theory, mechanisms into instilling such resilience in smart city design will be discussed.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
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- Futurewei (Huawei) Technologies
- 2nd Floor, 400 Crossing Blvd.
- Bridgewater, New Jersey
- United States 08807
- Contact Event Host
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Naresh Chand, Phone 908-7237001
- Co-sponsored by METSAC
Speakers
Narayan B. Mandayam of Rutgers University, New Jersey
Cultivating Smart and Connected Communities: Design of Resilient Smart Cities
Smart city operation requires the integration of critical infrastructures, such as transportation systems, wireless systems, water networks and power grids. These critical infrastructures will share energy, computing, wireless services, economic investments and most importantly users and operating personnel. These infrastructures typically face daily wear and tear; natural disasters, such as storms and earthquakes; and potential malicious attacks, such as cyber-attacks on the power grid or internet. Further, failures can spread from one infrastructure to others, and lead to cascading effects. Protecting smart cities from failures and damage requires making critical infrastructures resilient and reallocating resources toward recovery efforts. Further, understanding and influencing the behavior of people (end-users) is also essential since they use and share the different critical infrastructures. In this talk, using models from game theory (dynamic games and Colonel Blotto games) and prospect theory, mechanisms into instilling such resilience in smart city design will be discussed.
Biography:
Prof. Narayan Mandayam is a Distinguished Professor and Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University, where he also serves as Associate Director of the Wireless Information Network Laboratory (WINLAB). Using constructs from game theory, communications and networking, his work has focused on system modeling, information processing as well as resource management for enabling cognitive wireless technologies to support various applications. His recent work has focused on the use of prospect theory in understanding the psychophysics of pricing for wireless data networks as well as the smart grid. His recent interests also include enabling privacy in IoT, building resilience in smart city infrastructures as well as modeling and analysis of trustworthy knowledge creation on the internet. Dr. Mandayam is a co-recipient of the 2015 IEEE Communications Society Advances in Communications Award (given to the most impactful paper in the preceding 15 calendar years) for his work on power control and pricing, the 2014 IEEE Donald G. Fink Award for his IEEE Proceedings paper titled “Frontiers of Wireless and Mobile Communications” and the 2009 Fred W. Ellersick Prize from the IEEE Communications Society for his work on dynamic spectrum access models and spectrum policy. He is also a recipient of the Peter D. Cherasia Faculty Scholar Award from Rutgers University (2010), the National Science Foundation CAREER Award (1998), the Institute Silver Medal from the Indian Institute of Technology (1989) and its Distinguished Alumnus Award (2018). He is a Fellow and Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE.
Address:ECE Department , , Rutgers University , New Jersey, United States
Agenda
04:30 - 05:45 pm Presentation: Cultivating Smart and Connected Communities: Design of Resilient Smart Cities
05:45 - 06:30 pm Dinner and Networking