A Unique Educational & Career Opportunity with Stephen Wolfram

A unique opportunity to do original research at the frontiers of science, the Wolfram Science Summer School helps about 40 students from a diverse range of scientific backgrounds learn about Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science (NKS) and apply it to their fields of interest. Most of these students are advanced undergraduates and early graduate students, but those in different circumstances are considered. We are looking for students who want to move their careers in the NKS direction. Read more »

Class of 2010

Andrei Stefan Pruteanu

Bio [2010]

Andrei Pruteanu is a PhD student at Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands, in the Parallel and Distributed Systems Department, Embedded Software group. His research project, financed by the Dutch government, involves developing algorithms for mobile wireless sensor networks for transport and logistics applications. He is interested in finding how complex system (network) behavior emerges from simple local interactions between the nodes.

Project Title

Cellular Automata Modeling of Mobile Wireless Mesh Networks Routing

Project

For most of the large-scale wireless mesh networks, increased topological dynamics is becoming the rule, rather than the exception. Node mobility, however, introduces a range of problems (communication interference and information loss due to high congestion and path uncertainty, high energy consumption, etc.) that are not handled well by periodically refreshing state information (routing tables), as algorithms designed for static networks typically do.

The main contribution of the project is the design of a novel class of algorithms for the creation of quasi-static geometrical patterns on top of mobile topologies. They are characterized by simple local interactions between nodes and exhibit self-healing and self-organization capabilities with respect to failures and node mobility.

Favorite Four-Color Totalistic Cellular Automaton

Rule 802910