Tracking everything, everywhere, and all the time: challenges and opportunities

#Tracking,Distributed #Sensing #Systems
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Technologies to track people, animals, and objects have come a long way, and are driving new location-based services and applications. In this talk, I will discuss tracking research at the Distributed Sensing Systems Group in Data61 | CSIRO, covering the challenges and opportunities, such as energy-neutrality, scalability, security/privacy, and data fusion. I will also discuss our tracking projects and applications, ranging from tracking animals, such as flying foxes, feral pigs and buffaloes, and livestock, to people, both through mobile devices and geo-tagged social media, and objects of interest. 

Please note that this meeting can be joined via WebEx. The WebEx meeting number is 594 738 496 and here is the link to join WebEx meeting: 594 738 496

 

https://ieeemeetings.webex.com/ieeemeetings/j.php?MTID=mc07b1d432072e6ae96100dc4cbb0d9b2

 

Join by phone (Toll free): 1800456315 or (02) 81887197

 



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 26 Jul 2017
  • Time: 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC+10:00) Brisbane
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  • USQ Springfield Campus
  • Education City, Sinnathamby Blvd
  • Springfield Central , Queensland
  • Australia 4300
  • Room Number: Room B434
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  • Starts 22 June 2017 12:00 AM
  • Ends 25 July 2017 12:00 AM
  • All times are (UTC+10:00) Brisbane
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Professor Raja Jurdak - Senior Principal Research Scientist at CSIRO

Topic:

Tracking everything, everywhere, and all the time: challenges and opportunities

Technologies to track people, animals, and objects have come a long way, and are driving new location-based services and applications. In this talk, I will discuss tracking research at the Distributed Sensing Systems Group in Data61 | CSIRO, covering the challenges and opportunities, such as energy-neutrality, scalability, security/privacy, and data fusion. I will also discuss our tracking projects and applications, ranging from tracking animals, such as flying foxes, feral pigs and buffaloes, and livestock, to people, both through mobile devices and geo-tagged social media, and objects of interest.

Biography:

Professor Raja Jurdak is a Senior Principal Research Scientist at CSIRO, where he leads the Distributed Sensing Systems Group. He has a PhD in Information and Computer Science at University of California, Irvine in 2005. His current research interests focus on energy-efficiency and mobility in networks. Prof. Jurdak and his group have led several large scale and long-term sensing projects on sensing remote and challenging environments, in agriculture, ecology, health, manufacturing, and energy. Most recently, he has led the large Batmon project for continental scale tracking of flying foxes, delivering near-perpetual tracking of small assets. His research at CSIRO has received multiple awards, including the CSIRO medal for environmental achievement and the Endeavour Executive Award in 2011, the Queensland iAwards Merit Award in 2014, and the best paper award at the EWSN conference in 2016.
 
Prof Jurdak has over 120 peer-reviewed journal and conference publications, as well as a book published by Springer in 2007 titled Wireless Ad Hoc and Sensor Networks: A Cross-Layer Design Perspective. He serves on the editorial board of 3 international journals. He regularly serves on the organising and technical program committees of international conferences (DCOSS, RTSS, Sensapp, Percom, EWSN, ICDCS). Prof Jurdak is an Honorary Professor at University of Queensland, and Adjunct Professor at Macquarie University and James Cook University. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE.
 
The driving interest of Jurdak's research is around mobility and energy-efficiency in sensor networks. As our world embeds more resource-limited devices for digital data collection, coordinating among these devices to extract the most information value is key for better understanding the physical world and to determine how to best manage it. Sensor networks that operate in full harmony with the underlying dynamics of the environment they aim to monitor is the ultimate goal of Jurdak's work.