Title: Telecom%20Research%20at%20Rutgers%20University
1Telecom Research at Rutgers University
- Fred S. Roberts
- Director, DIMACS
- froberts_at_dimacs.rutgers.edu
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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2Outline
- What is Telecom?
- The research players and their background
- A selection of research topics suggested by
Rutgers faculty - Short synopsis
- Food for thought aimed at stimulating discussion
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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3What is Telecom?
The set of technologies and sciences at the
intersection of communications, information, and
computing
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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4What is Telecom?
- 20th century transport, switching, and storage
of narrowband voice and data - 21st century? Reasonable goal fully integrated
and networked broadband multimedia including - data of all types
- text, images, audio, video
- virtual reality
- searchable, browseable multimedia documents
- shared reality tele-collaboration
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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5What is Telecom?
- So telecom is all about networks
- interconnections of networks (e.g., the Internet)
- operation and maintenance of networks
- things that make up networks (routers, hubs,
switches) - things that get moved around networks (data,
text, voice, images, video, ) - things that attach to networks (devices, sensors,
monitors) - services that run on networks
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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6Outline
- What is Telecom?
- The research players and their background
- A selection of research topics suggested by
Rutgers faculty - Short synopsis
- Food for thought aimed at stimulating discussion
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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7Major Hubs of Telecom Research at Rutgers
- CAIP (Center for Advanced Information Processing)
- DIMACS (Center for Discrete Mathematics and
Theoretical Computer Science) - WINLAB (Wireless Information Laboratory)
- Computer Science Dept.
- Statistics Dept.
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8CAIP
- Established by NJCST in 1985
- Mission industrial applications of advanced
computing technologies - Industry partners
- ATT, Avaya, Cisco, Datacube, Fujitsu, General
Motors, IBM, InfoValue, Intel, Iscan, Kodak,
Lucent, NEC, NIST, Oracle, OSS Nokalva,
Panasonic, Sarnoff, Siemens, SpeechWorks, SUN,
Telcordia, Texas Inst., CECOM, Picatinny Arsenal,
Verizon, Xybernaut - University partners
- UMDNJ, NJIT, Princeton, Stanford, MIT, Johns
Hopkins, CMU, Colorado, Cal Tech, Columbia, New
Mexico State - 86 faculty, visiting scientists, staff, and
students
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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9Telecom-related Research at CAIP
- Multimodal interfaces (NSF)
- Image and speech pattern recognition (DOD)
- VLSI design (NJCST)
- Bio/nano mechatronics (NSF)
- Applications to homeland security (DOD, CECOM)
- SiC semiconductors (DARPA, Union Carbide)
- Collaborative networking (DOD, NSF)
- Distributed grid computing (NSF)
- Data visualization (NSF)
- Telemedicine/rehabilitation (NSF, Novartis)
- Virtual environments (NSF)
- Speech production (NIH)
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10Telecom-related Research at CAIP Future
Opportunities
- Natural communication with information systems.
- Virtual environments for collaboration
- Internet delivery of rehabilitative therapies
- Autonomic grid computing
- Systems and sensors on a chip
- Detection of radioactive materials
- Human imaging for dosimetry analysis
- Low bit-rate communication for security
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11CAIP Cumulative Impacts
- External Contract Funding 55M
- (17M in current contracts)
- Ph.D.s and MSs graduated 213
- Patents filed 80
- Startup companies assisted 20
- CAIP spinoff companies created 3
- Small business outreach, new jobs 100
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12DIMACS
- The importance of discrete math and theoretical
CS (algorithm development) led Rutgers,
Princeton, ATT Bell Labs, and Bellcore to
develop strong research groups - In 1988, they joined to form DIMACS
- Telecommunications ATT Labs, Bell Labs,
Telcordia, Avaya - Computing NEC Research, IBM Research, Microsoft
Research, HP Labs (Princeton) - 1989 prestigious NSF science and technology
center award. 10M grant largest at Rutgers.
NJCST played important role.
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13Telecom-related Research at DIMACS
- next generation networks technologies
- computational information theory and coding
- communication security
- simulations of communication architectures
- computer-aided verification of software
- massively parallel computing
- massive data sets
- applications of large scale discrete optimization
to communication networks - cryptography
- complexity of interactive computing
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14Telecom-related Research at DIMACS - II
- telecom researchers find new applications of
their methods - homeland security research
- epidemiology/public health
- computational biology
- DNA computing
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15Telecom Research at DIMACS
- More than 50M in external funding for research
and education program at DIMACS since its
inception - NSF, ONR, NSA, NIH, DARPA, ICMIC (intelligence
community), Sloan Foundation, Burroughs Wellcome
Fund, NJCST, numerous companies. - Solution of Gilbert-Pollak conjecture led to
highly efficient heuristics for design of
communication networks. - Pioneer in field of computer-aided verification
methods now used widely by Intel, Sun, Motorola,
ATT, Lucent. - Simulation software for the global internet
adopted by more than 40 companies/universities.
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16Telecom Research at DIMACS
- Work on error-correcting codes led to new
techniques for the design of efficicient encoders
and decoders. - A remarkably simple on-line algorithm for bin
packing small information packets of varying
sizes into bins of fixed capacity. - Powerful cryptographic methods for secure
authorized access. - The players at DIMACS
- 230 scientists from partner universities and
companies - partner company scientists directly involved in
DIMACS projects - more than 1000 visitors a year
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17WINLAB
- Founded in 1989
- Broad experimental and theoretical expertise in
wireless technologies - Broad collaborative experience with industry
- about 20 industry sponsors
- major partners brought into NJ include Intel,
Nortel, Thomson, Samsung, NTT, Sprint, Motorola,
Mitsubishi, - Implementing technology transfer through both
sponsor companies and startups
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18Telecom Research at WINLAB
- Freebits -- short range ultra high speed
communications - NJ Center for Wireless Communication
- 4th Generation Radio Resource Management
- Adaptive Networking for 3rd Generation Cellular
- Security in Next Generation Wireless
- Dynamic Spectrum Management
- First Generation of MUSE sensor program
- Research Wireless Testbed
- Cognitive Network Management
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19Telecom Research at WINLAB
- Pioneer in hot spot wireless networking
technology now appearing at Starbucks, McDonalds,
etc. through its infostations program. Going
out to startups and Army STTR tech transfer. - 20 faculty/staff 40-50 students
- Currently over 2M a year in funding.
- This year won IEEE Marconi and William R. Bennett
Awards
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20WINLAB Implications for the Future
- Wireless is fastest growing segment of telecom.
- Almost 500M cell phones sold/year.
- 1/3 of calls in US are already wireless, not
wired (FCC). - 148M US subscribers, half the population. (FCC).
- 76B Wireless revenues in 2002 30 of telecom
(FCC). - Wireless Data devices market expected to be 10B
by end of 2003. - 21M American users of Wireless Hot Spots by 2007
(IBM). - 6,300 global hotspots in 2001 expect 114,000 by
2006. (IBM). - NJ needs a world-class center of expertise in all
major areas of wireless communications.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
21Economic Impact of Wireless Research in NJ
- 100s of new high tech jobs/year via startups and
partnerships. - Retain high tech talent in NJ.
- Train and retain the best students.
- Diversify the telecom industrial base in NJ
through diverse wireless end-user applications,
not just the traditional (and now stagnant) core
infrastructure.
22Outline
- What is Telecom?
- The research players and their background
- A selection of research topics suggested by
Rutgers faculty - Short synopsis
- Food for thought aimed at stimulating discussion
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
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23Multimodal Integrated Wireless Sensor on-Silicon
(MUSE)(WinLAB, ECE, BME, CS, UMDNJ, GaTech)
- Today, sensors are individual units as
transistors once were. - Temperature, pressure, light, chemicals, etc.
- Expensive controllers, readouts, and
communications - Usually physically large and often hand-made.
- With new technology, we should be able to link
sensors in complex networks to gather information
in new ways.
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24Multimodal Integrated Wireless Sensor on-Silicon
(MUSE)
- Networks of Sensors
- Applications to medicine, consumer, environment,
security, military, etc. - Need new wireless networking technology
- Need ultra-low cost sensors and controllers
- New sensor technology that can measure many
properties - Ultra low power electronics, algorithms, and
protocols - All on one chip, reusing as much of integrated
circuit technology as possible
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25Multimodal Integrated Wireless Sensor on-Silicon
(MUSE)
- Low Cost, Wireless Networked Sensors
- Strongly multidisciplinary program
- Draws in all levels of technology from devices to
networks to applications and security. - Build on strengths of the partners and ongoing
programs. - Too large to tackle without cohesive program with
a shared vision and strong core funding.
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26Multimodal Integrated Wireless Sensor on-Silicon
(MUSE)
- Economic impact for NJ
- Market for integrated sensors estimated at 3B in
2005 and 10B in 2010 - This is before security adders or changes in
military needs. - Can build on existing industrial partnerships and
experience to make the technology transfer
happen.
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27Locating Mobile Users
- Estimating the location of wireless
communications users attracts huge attention - Applications include
- location-aware services
- finding the nearest vending machine or printer
- finding the nearest buyer or seller in a market
of buyers and sellers - in a museum setting, presenting artifact-specific
descriptions on a handheld device - locating a misplaced handheld device
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28Locating Mobile Users
- Other applications
- emergency location
- identifying the room location of a crime victim
- in a prison setting, locating a distressed guard
- access control
- blocking access to a Wi-Fi network from outside a
building - blocking access for specific users from specific
locations
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29Locating Mobile Users
- Team from Rutgers (Statistics Dept.) and Avaya
Inc. (wireless expertise) have developed novel
and highly sophisticated statistical algorithms
unlike any of the existing approaches - Substantially more accurate location estimation
with dramatically less training data - Immediate application in enterprise settings
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30Locating Mobile Users
- Every major telecommunications company working on
this problem - Tremendous commercial potential
- Avaya team has significant experience with
wireless technology and markets - Rutgers has a long track record of funding and
innovation in statistical methods - Urgent need for seed funding for experimentation
and software development
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31Massive Data Analysis Lab (MassDAL)
- Agenda Gather, manage and process massive data
logs----Web, IP/wireless traffic data, location
trajectories of objects, sensor readings of
physical world.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
32Massive Data Analysis Lab (MassDAL)
- Key Challenges
- Scale Beyond the traditional human scale. Eg.,
IP data at a single router interface for an hour
exceeds total yearly worldwide credit card
transactions! - Data Collection probes/sensors with associated
data quality and communication problems. - Need breakthroughs in Mathematics, Algorithms,
Systems and Engineering, to meet these
challenges. - Potential Major impact in Telecom,
Transportation and Society-at-large.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
33State of MassDAL
- Engineering
- Consulting in analysis of wireless network logs.
Client ATT Wireless, 3rd largest in US, 20
Million customers. Terabytes/month. Current
value 3M per year. 5 pers. Fully operational,
telco-grade! Interest from Cingular wireless. - Incorporated novel algorithms in operational IP
network data analysis tools. Current partner
ATT. Potential partner Lucent. - Mathematics and Computer Science.
- Algorithms, Databases, Statistics, and Data
Mining on novel models and algorithms. - Supported by NSF grants. Partners Rutgers CS,
DIMACS, MIT.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
34State of MassDAL (Contd)
- Science
- Developing wearable sensors for tracking location
of objects as well as interactions between
objects. - Current partner Telcordia. Their initial
investment 300K/3 months (est). Potential
partner in works Los Alamos National Lab. - Potential Analysis of social networks for
Epidemiology and Homeland Security.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
35Future of MassDAL
- Research Need breakthrough research in
mathematics, systems, databases, algorithms,
sensor networking. - Expand data domains.
- Potential partners Google, NJ auto insurance
fraud data, USPTO patent data, AWS location
trajectories, etc. - Build state-of-art facility at Rutgers.
- Secure, 24x7, data hosting and analysis
infrastructure capable of gathering and
processing petabytes of data/month across
domains, data sources, etc. Unique in the world! - Potential.
- Every wireless, telecom, internet service
provider is looking to farm out this crucial
piece of their operations. Estimated market for
these services 100s of millions in US per
year. Crucial for NJ State. Interest from
multiple VCs now.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
36Visualizing, Monitoring, and Analyzing Network
Data(Statistics Dept. and Avaya Labs)
- Communication networks are widespread.
- Typical data provides a partial view of flow-data
(e.g., on links) - Analyzing network data is important in
- network planning and design
- monitoring flaws
- measuring reliability parameters
- determining suitability of the network for
different transmission functions (voice, data,
voice over IP)
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
37Visualizing, Monitoring, and Analyzing Network
Data
- Challenges
- Network data is complex and of high
dimensionality. - Statistical methods for analyzing network data
are few and far between. - Visualizing data helps us to spot trends quickly.
- Need is to develop high quality, practical,
statistical and data analytic tools for
understanding data from partial views and limited
measurements.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
38Visualizing, Monitoring, and Analyzing Network
Data
- Results potentially useful for other kinds of
networks transportation, social, - Such tools of great importance in telecom.
- Research in this area already funded through NSF
and NSA - New methods/products should be very useful to NJ
companies.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
39Self-Healing Dependable Computing
- Computer, Heal Thyself
- Scientific American, July 2003
- We need systems that
- monitor themselves
- adjust hardware and software configurations to
match demand - predict and diagnose problems and effect repairs
- defend against hacker attacks
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
40Self-Healing Dependable ComputingKey Concerns
- Susceptibility to attack
- Do denial-of-service attacks and viruses cause
problem? - Performability
- Is system available with adequate performance
when needed? - Dependability
- Can you rely on correct and predictable behavior?
- Self-awareness and autonomy
- Does your system monitor and repair itself?
- Fail-safe uses
- Would you trust your computer with a
mission-critical task?
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
41Self-Healing Dependable Computing
State of the Art
- Information Technology is predicated on
well-behaved, interacting machines - but spam, viruses, and attacks are epidemic
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42Solutions
Self-Healing Dependable Computing
- Be realistic about computing environments
- Errors, both human and computer, will always be
present - Machines are only as well-behaved as their owners
- Viruses, spam, and attacks ARE part of the
environment
- Design systems that are self-aware and
self-healing - Hardware is fast enough and affordable
- Establish self-administered distributed policies
- Continuously monitor, diagnose, and adapt
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
43Self-Healing Dependable Computing Economic Impact
- On the global IT sector
- System downtime will become increasingly costly
- Without self-healing systems salaries will
dominate IT costs - On New Jersey build on strengths
- Two of the six NJ growth clusters are related to
IT - NJ is center of telecom industry
- NJ has the largest number of scientists/engineers
per capita - Experienced workforce is available for new
initiatives
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
44Self-Healing Dependable Computing Rutgers
Expertise
- Active research in several related areas
- autonomous agents, change analysis for OO
languages, component-based scalable networks,
database mining, distributed systems, fault
tolerance, peer-to-peer computing, secure
services, modeling and simulation - 7 CS faculty are currently working on relevant
research - 3.5M in external grants awarded over last few
years - Active industrial collaboration
- Panasonic (Peer-to-peer computing)
- IBM (change analysis for OO languages)
- Telcordia and Rutgers CS are developing a joint
initiative in this area
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
45Multimodal Human-Machine Interface
46Multimodal Human-Machine InterfaceReal-world
trial with NJ National Guard
47User interface for interaction and collaboration
with robots and humans
NSF Equipment Grant EIA98-18313 Center for
Advanced Information Processing, Rutgers
University, Piscataway, NJ 08854. PI J.L.
Flanagan, co-PIs J. Wilder, I. Marsic, M. Krane
48Portable Interactive Command Console (PICC)
Internet
HQ/VEHICLE
Flatpanel
display
Sensors
Robotic Vehicles Emergency Responder in
the Field
49Pervasive and Autonomous Computing WinLAB, ECE,
CS
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50Pervasive and Autonomous Computing WinLAB, ECE,
CS
- Communication and computing cost and performance
have been improving by 2x every 18 months or less
for decades. - Wireless now makes it possible to complete the
last link to people, machines, sensors, etc.,
everywhere. - Great opportunity (and challenge) to move from
point-to-point communication to pervasive
communication, computing and knowledge access.
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51Pervasive and Autonomous Computing
- Computing and communication can be integrated in
the environment - Knowledge, information, communication always
available, but less obtrusive - Your personal Radar ORiley is there to help,
wherever you are (and gone when you want privacy) - Sensors bring realtime data that matters
- From your heartbeat to traffic jams and afternoon
weather - The worlds knowledge is always available when
needed.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
52Pervasive and Autonomous Computing
- Massive (and interesting) Research Challenges
- Flexible system integration
- New approaches to networking at all levels
- Information-centric parallel and grid computing
- Energy efficiency at all levels
- Context awareness for communication and
applications - Location awareness in routing and computing
- Effective and user friendly security at all
levels - Integrating of Computing and Communication
(especially wireless) is already a major
corporate thrust at Intel, Microsoft, IBM, and
many others.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
53Pervasive and Autonomous Computing
- Rutgers has expertise and ongoing programs in
these areas. - Communications and computing affect every aspect
of the economy and every individual - Recent events show the limitations of the
existing models for Telecom. NJ could take the
lead in changing the landscape. - New Jersey has the right combination of
people, expertise, facilities to make it happen.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
54- Trusted Computing/Authentication
- Rutgers Camden (CS)
- Security is the fastest growing sector of the
telecommunications market today - Security involves encryption, authentication,
access control, identity management, user
provisioning, - Telecom often involves access to remote
resources, requiring authentication of users and
monitoring of users access privileges
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55Trusted Computing/Authentication
- Some Research Themes
- Authentication of remote users is usually done by
passwords. - Traditional (alphanumeric) passwords are not
user-friendly and lead to security problems and
increased IT costs. - Graphical passwords user-friendly provide an
extremely large password space (similar to a
cryptographic key space) and thus are inherently
more secure. - Human-factors analysis of new password schemes
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
56Trusted Computing/Authentication
- Impact of Research
- Passwords are the most common method for
authentication, but also one of the most
vulnerable to cyber as well as physical attack. - Improved authentication will impact
human-computer interface, security. - Will allow users to directly use passwords as
cryptographic keys - Collaborations Drexel, Brooklyn Poly., Minnesota
- Collaborations Unisys
- Password research is of great interest to
software and telecommunications industries.
Commission on Jobs Growth and Economic Development
57Trusted Computing/Authentication
- Other Research Challenges
- Location-aware authentication/provisioning
- Dynamically changing access control and inference
management - Biometrics
58Telecom and Homeland Security
- Communication security
- wireless security
- sharing data
- information privacy
- identity theft
- secure e-commerce
- Emergency Communication
- Sensor Networks for Bio/Chemical Hazard
Monitoring
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59Telecom and Homeland Security
- Rutgers projects in communication security
include - tunable, programmable, adaptive filters for
secure communication (Engineering School) - low bit-rate coding of speech signals for secure
communications (CAIP) (with Sarnoff) - information privacy (DIMACS) (with HP Labs NJ,
Telcordia, ATT Labs, NEC Labs) - secure e-commerce (CS with Fogbreak Software)
- These projects are funded by NSF, DARPA, NJCST
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60Telecom and Homeland Security
- Rutgers projects in emergency communication
include - infostations for rapid wireless communication for
first responders (WINLAB) (with Mayflower Radio) - rapid networking at emergency locations (DIMACS
with Telcordia) - rapid telecollaboration (CAIP)
These projects are funded by DARPA
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61Telecom and Homeland Security
- Rutgers project in sensor networks with
application to bio/chemical hazard monitoring - WINLAB
- partnered with Agere, Sarnoff, Semandex, Thomson,
JJ, Lucent
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62Telecom and Homeland Security
- Methods used in telecom are coming to be useful
in homeland security research. - Provides a great business opportunity for NJs
telecom industry. - Already, NJ telecom companies are subcontractors
to Rutgers federal grants in this area. - Examples are
- surveillance/detection methods
- bioterrorism sensor location
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63Telecom and Homeland Security
- Surveillance/detection
- Massive data set methods used in fraud detection,
network intrusion detection, etc. are being used
in bioterrorist attack detection, emerging
disease identification. - DIMACS, 3M from NSF, ONR, Sloan Foundation,
Burroughs Wellcome Fund - cooperating with ATT, Lucent, Telcordia, Merck,
state and local health departments, CDC
anthrax
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64Telecom and Homeland Security
- Surveillance/detection
- MDS methods also used in monitoring streams of
text messages for new events - DIMACS, 1M from ICMIC (intelligence community)
- cooperating with ATT, Telcordia
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65Telecom and Homeland Security
- Bioterrorism sensor location
BASIS bioterroism sensor system
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66Telecom and Homeland Security
- Bioterrorism sensor location
- Network design methods useful.
- Equipment placing algorithms developed for
broadband access at Telcordia are candidates for
modification for sensor placement problems. - Algorithms developed at Telcordia for placing
regenerating equipment in transparent optical
networks are also relevant. - Work at DIMACS with partners from ATT Labs,
Telcordia, Industrial Engineering, Environmental
and Occupational Health and Safety Institute
(joint with UMDNJ), Statistics, CS, and RUTCOR
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67Telecom and Homeland Security
- Thus, homeland security research can put NJ
telecom back to work.
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