15th International Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc, and Wireless Networks, Telecom ParisTech, Paris, France, 15th - 19th May, 2017
Presentations
Here, you can find the slides to WiOpt'17 presentations. The papers winning the Best Paper Awards are presented here.
Plenary Talks
- François Baccelli (The University of Texas at Austin, USA / INRIA, France), talk given on Tuesday, May 16, at 9h30: Stochastic Geometry and Queuing in Wireless Networks
- Rajesh Sundaresan (Indian Institute of Science, India), talk given on Wednesday, May 17, at 8h45: A closer look at the classical fixed-point analysis of wireless local area networks
- Leandros Tassiulas (Yale University, USA), talk given on Thursday, May 18, at 9h30: Traffic Offloading and Wireless Edge Networks: Theory and Novel Realizations
Invited Talks
- Eduard Jorswieck (TU Dresden, Germany), talk given on Wednesday, Tuesday, May 16, at 12h30: Monotonic and Sequential Fractional Programming for Performance Optimization in Interference Networks
- Samson Lasaulce (Paris-Saclay University / CNRS, France), talk given on Thursday, May 18, at 10h30: Coded Power Control
- Michèle Wigger (LTCI, Telecom ParisTech, University Paris-Saclay, France), talk given on Wednesday, Wednesday, May 17, at 14h30: Additional Coding Opportunities in Cache-Aided Networks
- Angela Zhang (The Chinese University of Hong Kong), talk given on Thursday, May 18, at 16h15: Randomized Gaussian Message Passing for Scalable PHY Layer of C-RAN
CCDWN
- Petros Elia (Eurecom, France): Coded caching and advanced PHY: Interesting interplays between caching, feedback and topology in wireless communications
- George Iosifidis (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland): Joint management of storage and network resources in software-defined wireless systems
GREENNET
- Aylin Yener (Pennslyvania State University, USA): Foundations of Energy Harvesting and Energy Cooperating Communications
RAWNET
- Marco Di Renzo (Paris-Saclay University / CNRS, France): On System-Level Analysis and Optimization of Large-Scale Networks
SpaSWiN
- Martin Haenggi (University of Notre Dame , USA): How Typical is “Typical”? Characterizing Deviations using the Meta Distribution