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An invited session
is one that takes a particular theme and is organized by an individual
(the proposer) separate from the technical program committee. Proposers
will serve as session chairs. Proposers are responsible for identifying
contributors for the session, for reviewing the contributed papers, and
for submitting all final camera-ready papers in the session.
Instructions
for Submitting Invited Session Proposals
- Session organizers
are expected to collect and review summaries of papers in their proposed
session.
This should take place between 15 November
2001 and 15 February 2002.
- Proposers should
submit a one-paragraph theme for their session plus a list of papers,
paper abstracts, authors and their contact information. If the overall
invited session extends over a 1 hour 0 minute session slot, then the
total number of session slots needed should be specified. This information
should be submitted to kiruba@ieee.org
by 15 February 2002.
- Notification of
accepted invited sessions will be provided by 1
March 2002.
- Proposers of accepted
invited sessions must submit all final camera ready papers for their
session by
1 May 2002.
The current list of
submitted invited sessions is listed below. Authors who might want to
submit a paper under one of these invited sessions can inquire with the
identified session organizer to see if they are accepting papers. Any
author who wishes to designate their regular paper (with abstract already
submitted) as part of one of these invited sessions should contact both
the session organizer on one of the Technical Program Co-Chairs (kiruba@ieee.org
or ben.slocumb@ieee.org).
Information
Fusion for Critical Infrastructure Protection
Jagdish
Chandra, George Washington University
S. S. Iyengar, Lousiana State University, iyengar@bit.csc.lsu.edu
Srikanta Kumar, Defense Advanced Project Agency
GMTI
Tracking
Mahendra
Mallick, Alphatech, Inc., mahendra.mallick@alphatech.com
AFOSR
Information Fusion Initiative
Allen
Waxman, Boston University, waxman@cns.bu.edu
John Tangney, AFOSR
Image
Fusion and Exploitation
Allen
Waxman, Boston University, waxman@cns.bu.edu
Jacqueline LeMoigne of NASA Goddard (Greenbelt, Maryland)
High
Level Knowledge Bases for Information Fusion
Raymond
A. Liuzzi, Rome Laboratory, liuzzir@rl.af.mil
Situation
Analysis and Situational Awareness
Stephane
Paradis, DREV, Stephane.Paradis@drev.dnd.ca
Distributed
Tracking and Fusion
Chee-Yee
Chong (Booz Allen Hamilton), chong_chee@bah.com
James Llinas (State University of New York at Buffalo) llinas@eng.buffalo.edu
Distributed
Detection, Classification, and Recognition
Alexander
Tartakovsky (University of Southern California)
tartakov@math.usc.edu
Probabilistic
Multi-Hypothesis Tracking and Related Methods
Tod
Luginbuhl (Naval Undersea Warfare Center) t.e.luginbuhl@ieee.org
Peter Willett (University of Connecticut) willett@engr.unconn.edu
Information
Fusion Using Bayesian Networks
Qiang
Ji (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) qji@ecse.rpi.edu
Prof. Carl Looney (University of Nevada)
Information
Fusion Techniques for Surveillance and Security Applications
Gian
Luca Foresti (University of Udine, Italy) foresti@dimi.uniud.it
Pramod Varshney (Syracuse University) varshney@syr.edu
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