Special Issue on Vehicular Wireless Networks and Vehicular
Intelligent Transportation Systems
Aim & Scope
With the rapid development of wireless technologies, the Vehicular
Wireless Networks (V-Winet) and Vehicular Intelligent Transportation
Systems (V-ITS) have recently received much attention. V-Winets and V-ITS
aim to ensure traffic safety for drivers, provide comfort for passengers
and reduce transportation time and fuel consumption with many potential
applications. For instance, vehicular safety applications include automatic
collision notification, heavy fog detection and notification, remote diagnostics,
emergency management, and other assistances for safe driving. Non-safety
applications include real-time traffic congestion notification, location-based
driver information services, high-speed tolling, vehicle tracking, automobile
high speed Internet access, in-place traffic view, and many others. To
facilitate these applications, many different types of communications
and networking would be involved, including intra-vehicle, vehicle-to-vehicle
(V-to-V), vehicle-to-roadside (V-to-R) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V-to-I)
communications for V-Winet and V-ITS to provide timely information or
Internet access to vehicles, drivers, and passengers. Consequently, V-Winet
and V-ITS need to integrate existing networking technologies, such as IEEE
802.11a, IEEE 802.11p, DSRC, 3G, IEEE 802.16, Bluetooth, Sensor networks,
and ZigBee for easy, accurate, effective and simple communications among
vehicles, users, and infrastructure networks.
This special issue aims to foster the dissemination of high-quality,
original, unpublished research covering all aspects of V-Winet and V-ITS
communications, networking, and applications. Topics of interest include,
but not limited to, the followings:
- Network Architecture of V-Winet/V-ITS
- V-Winet/V-ITS Services and Applications
- Cooperative Aspects of V-Winet/V-ITS
- Availability and Scalability Issues in V-Winet/V-ITS
- Mobility, Traffic Models and Network Management for V-Winet/V-ITS
- Cross-layer Optimization Techniques for V-Winet/V-ITS
- Modulation, Coding, and Channel Modeling for V-Winet/V-ITS
- Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication Protocols
- Vehicle-to-Roadside Communication Protocols
- Vehicle-to-Infrastructure Communication Protocols
- Simulation Framework and Real-World Testbeds for V-Winet/V-ITS
- Driving Safety and Related Applications and Services
- Green Technologies and V-Winet/V-ITS
Submission Guidelines
Prospective authors are invited to submit research contributions
representing original, previously unpublished work. Submitted papers
will be carefully evaluated based on originality, significance, technical
soundness, and clarity of exposition. Authors should follow the JISE
(http://www.iis.sinica.edu.tw/page/jise/InstructiontoAuthors.html) manuscript
format as described in the Instruction to Authors. Manuscripts (pdf and source
files) must be directly emailed to the Guest Editors, Chih-Yung Chang, cychang@mail.tku.edu.tw
, or Yu-Chee Tseng, yctseng@cs.nctu.edu.tw, with clear indication that submission
is for the Special Issue on Vehicular Wireless Networks and Vehicular
Intelligent Transportation Systems, Journal of Information Science and
Engineering. All manuscripts should include a title page containing the
title of the paper, full names and affiliations, complete postal and
electronic addresses, phone and fax numbers, an abstract, and allots
of keywords. The contacting author should be clearly identified.
Important Dates
Paper Submission Deadline: March 30, 2009 (Tentative)
Acceptance Notification: July 31, 2009
Final Manuscript Due: August 31, 2009
Publication Date: May, 2010 (Tentative)
Guest Editors
- Prof. Chih-Yung Chang
Dept. of Computer Science and Information
Engineering
Tamkang University
Taipei Hsien, 32001
Taiwan
cychang@mail.tku.edu.tw
- Prof. Chien-Chung Shen
Dept. of Computer and Information Sciences
University of Delaware
Newark, DE 19716, U.S.A.
cshen@mail.eecis.udel.edu
- Prof. Xuemin (Sherman) Shen
Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering
University of Waterloo
Waterloo Ontario N2L 3G1, Cananda
xshen@bbcr.uwaterloo.ca
- Prof. Yu-Chee Tseng
Dept. of Computer
Science and Information Engineering
National Chiao Tung University
Hsinchu, 300 Taiwan
yctseng@cs.nctu.edu.tw