Archive for the 'Symposium' category

Summer Is Here: Time To Go To A Conference

June 28, 2010 9:39 am

Well I’ve scrounged up enough money to go to this conference. Though I can not attend the full 3 days. Actually I’ve paid for three days just can not afford to take the full 3 days off of work. I should be about to attend 1/2 the presentations. Some of the stuff looks super interesting. Sadly, my experience is that even if the topic is ultra cool, you end up with some super nerd who has no presentation skills or a foreign accent so thick you need a translator for his/her English. Having said that I love going to these things. You meet some of the most interesting people working on seriously cutting edge stuff.

Sessions below I attended. For a full list of sessions please check the ANTEM/AMEREM website.

UPDATE: Well this was a great conference with sessions from image and signal processing for medical use to how to use cell phone antennas to find people in nearby buildings. I wish I could talk to more of the participants, it is alway hard for me to find a way to break the ice with people I don’t know.

2010 ANTEM/AMEREM

14th International Symposium on Antenna Technology and Applied Electromagnetics [ANTEM] and the American Electromagnetics Conference [AMEREM]

The Program:

TA2: ANTEM Small Tunable Antennas and New Materials; [Organized Session]Tuesday, July 6th, MacDonald
TA5: UWB Noise Radar Applications in Homeland Security [Organized Session]; Tuesday, July 6th, Laurier Room
TA7: ANTEM Arrays and Leaky Wave Antennae; Tuesday, July 6th, Renaissance
TP9: ANTEM Antennas for Space Applications [Organized Session]; Tuesday, July 6th, MacDonald
TP10: ANTEM Sensors; Tuesday, July 6th, L’Orangerie
TP13: UWB Radar Systems and Signal Processing; Tuesday, July 6th, Drawing Room
TP14: ANTEM Bioelectromagnetics; Tuesday, July 6th, MacDonald
TP16: HPEM Electromagnetic Compatibility; Tuesday, July 6th, Burgundy
WA18: ANTEM Reflectarray Antennas [Organized Session]; Wednesday, July 7th, Renaissance
WA19: ANTEM Recent Developments on Earth-Space Propagation Research Applied to Satellite Communications [Organized Session]; Wednesday, July 7th, MacDonald
WA24: HPEM Antennas; Wednesday, July 7th, Burgundy
WP25: ANTEM Antenna Theory & Design I; Wednesday, July 7th, Renaissance
WP26: ANTEM Antennas for GPS/GNSS Applications [Organized Session]; Wednesday, July 7th, MacDonald
WP28: UWB Sensing Through Walls [Organized Session]; Wednesday, July 7th, Burgundy
WP29: HPEM Threats, Coupling Effects, Protection and Standards II [Organized Session]; Wednesday, July 7th, Laurier Room
TA33: ANTEM UWB Antennas and Systems II; Thursday, July 8th, Renaissance
TA34: ANTEM Microwave Devices and Circuits; Thursday, July 8th, MacDonald
TA36: UXO, Landmine, IED Detection I; Thursday, July 8th, Burgundy
TA37: UWB Antennas, Radiation and Propagation; Thursday, July 8th, Laurier Room
TA39: ANTEM EMI/EMC; Thursday, July 8th, Renaissance
TP40: ANTEM Artificial Dielectrics & Electromagnetic Bandgap Structures [Organized Session]; Thursday, July 8th, Renaissance
TP42: ANTEM Microstrip Integrated and Active Antennas; Thursday, July 8th, L’Orangerie
TP43: UXO, Landmine, IED Detection II; Thursday, July 8th, Burgundy
TP44: UWB Target Detection, Discrimination & Imaging; Thursday, July 8th, Laurier Room
TP45: HPEM Threats, Coupling Effects, Protection and Standards I [Organized Session]; Thursday, July 8th, Drawing Room
TP46: ANTEM Microwave and Millimeter Wave Antennas; Thursday, July 8th, L’Orangerie
TP48: UWB Communication [Organized Session]; Thursday, July 8th, Laurier Room

Computational Intelligence for Security and Defence Applications (CISDA), 2009

June 11, 2009 11:56 pm

cis_home2
 
 
Ottawa as has a cool conference coming up IEEE Symposium: Computational Intelligence for Security and Defence Applications:Detecting and Adapting to Emerging Threats (CISDA), 2009. The Symposium runs 8-10 July 2009 here in Ottawa it look like a good line up of presentations.

* Applied Computational Intelligence in Biometrics
* Military Operational Logistics Modeling and Simulation
* Adaptive Network Security and Management
* Advanced Information Systems, Intelligence Exploration and Utilization, and Computer Architectures for Military and Security Applications
* Complex Systems Engineering: Defence and Security Applications
* Computational Intelligence Techniques for Complex Adaptive Systems in Defence and Security
* Computational Intelligence Systems in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

I will be attend at least two days and maybe more. I look forward to this opportunity to hobnob with a bunch of super geeks. :-)

EDIT NOTE (Wed. 17, June, 2009): It is confirmed. I will be attending the full 3 days of this conference. :-) Life is good.

41st Annual IEEE International Carnahan Conference on Security Technology

October 9, 2007 11:13 pm

Today I took a day off work to attend the 41st Annual IEEE International Conference on Security Technology here in Ottawa. All I could afford was one day out of the 3 and that was more than enough. It is going to take a week for my brain to shrink to its normal small size. I attended the following lectures;

Morning Session

Fake Fingerprint Detection Using Sample Quality Measures
Stephen J. Elliott , Hakil Kim, Matthew R. Young, Shimon Modi – Purdue University, USA

Increasing Security with Correlation-Based Fingerprint Matching
Almudena Lindoso, Luis Entrena, Judith Liu-Jimenez,
Enrique San Millán – University Carlos III of Madrid, Spain

Vascular Biometric Systems & Their Security Evaluation
Raul Sanchez-Reillo, Belen Fernandez-Saavedra, Judith Liu-Jimenez, Carmen Sanches-Avila – University Carlos III of Madrid, Spain

Low Cost Multimodal Biometric Identification System Based on Hand Geometry, Palm & Fingerprint Texture
Miguel A Ferrer, Carlos M. Travieso, Jesús B. Alonso -
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain

Investigation on the Selection of Filtering
Parameters & Number Of Eigenvectors

Thirimachos Bourlai, Josef Kittler, Kieron Messer – University of Surrey, UK

Arbitrary Illumination Conditions for Facial Identification
Carlos M. Travieso, Jesús B Alonso, Miguel A. Ferrer -
Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain

Robust Biometric Identification Combining Face & Speech
Enric Monte-Moreno, Marcos Faundez-Zanuy – Universitària Politècnica de Mataró (UPC), Spain

Afternoon Sessions

Bacterial Survivability & Transferability on Biometric Devices
Christy Blomeke, Stephen J. Elliott, Thomas Walter, Brandt M. Davis, James E. Tollefson – Purdue University, USA
Smart-Card-Based Face Verification System: Empirical

Spectroscopic Approach for Aliveness Detection in Biometrics Authentication
Davar Pishva – Carnegie Mellon CyLab, Japan

Quantum Wireless Secure Communication Protocol
Tien-Sheng Lin, Sy-Yen Kuo – National Taiwan University, Taiwan

(NO SHOW) Indirect Human Computer Interaction-Based Biometrics for
Intrusion Detection Systems
Roman V. Yampolskiy – University at Buffalo, USA

TacNet: Mobile Ad Hoc Secure Communications Network
Loren E. Riblett, James M. Wiseman – Sandia National Laboratories, USA

The most interesting of these were the Fake Fingerprint Detection.., Vascular Biometric Systems…, Bacterial Survivability…, and Smartcard-Based-Face…. It will probably take me a week or to to go through all the conference proceedings. Much of what they dealt with I understood, that is until they dropped into the math. I was probably the only non-PhD in the crowd and one of the few not wearing a suit. LOL. I was the also the only one without a company indicated on our big name tags. That became a bit of a topic of conversation among a few of my table mates during the lunch. The joke was that I belonged to one of those un-named organizations. LOL. And if they asked me too many questions I’d make them disappear. I guess they’d never believe that someone would willing pay out of their own pocket to go to one of these conferences, I guess they are right in this for most people, then again I’m not most people.

These conferences are by my income standards very expensive. But given the finances I’d go again next year. There is important information that can be gather at these conference even if you are not a PhD. It does not take a PhD to see the significance, relevance and interconnectedness of these papers and there broader implications both for business and national governments.