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Jean-Christophe Laneri
Bio [2005]
Jean-Christophe Laneri is a master student from the Royal Institute of
Technology in Stockholm, in electrical engineering, with
specialization in Wireless Systems. He is also finishing a M.Sc. in
computer science from the French engineering school ESIEA. His
interests vary from evolutionary programming to computer languages and
operational research to also signal processing, remote sensing, and
wireless networks. He is an associate editor of the student journal
of the Association for Computing Machinery
(ACM), Crossroads. He participated twice in the ACM
International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) and once in the
ACM Student Research competition. Starting in September, he will do
his thesis in a research & development department in the wireless
networks domain.
Project Title
Simulating Wireless Sensor Networks
Project

A wireless sensor network (WSN) is a special kind of ad-hoc network
where all the nodes can sense, actuate and communicate with each other
using point-to-point multihop communication. WSNs are used in a wide
range of applications, such as environmental monitoring and tactical
surveillance. Such networks are characterized by a limited power
source. An optimal planning (what to "turn on/off") would require the
computation of the minimum set of sensors needed for the given
coverage constraint at each time instant: this is the so-called
topology control problem (TCP). In this project, we model WSNs as
cellular automata, and perform an NKS search on different sets of
transition rules. Results show that the NKS approach to the problem
appears to be very efficient in improving the longevity of the
network, performing better than previous works.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 10259
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