Student Papers Accepted at Mobility Conferences
Congratulations to the fifteen students whose submitted papers were accepted at upcoming conferences. This fall, the following students will present papers focused on mobile computing research. Four papers were accepted for presentation at The International Conference on Mobile Computing, Applications and Services (MobiCASE 2009) and one paper was accepted at the Second International Workshop on Mobile Entity Localization and Tracking in GPS-Less Environments (MELT09).
- Senaka Buthpitiya, Deepthi Madamanchi, Sumalatha Kommaraju, & Martin Griss, A Mobile, Context-aware Personal Messaging Assistant (MobiCASE 2009)
- Omar Abdul Baki, Tony Lin, Martin Griss, Joy Zhang, Pei Zhang, A Mobile Application to Detect Abnormal Patterns of Activity (MobiCASE 2009)
- Hsiuping Lin, Ying Zhang, Martin Griss, & Ilya Landa, WASP: An Enhanced Indoor Locationing Algorithm for a Congested Wi-Fi Environment (MELT 2009)
- Kathleen Yang, Neha Pattan, Alejandro Rivera, & Martin Griss, Multi-Agent Mobile Meeting Scheduling using Context (MobiCASE 2009)
- Diwakar Goel, Eisha Kher, Shriya Joag, Veda Mujumdar, Martin Griss, & Anind K. Dey, Context Aware Authentication Framework (MobiCASE 2009)
- Neha Pattan, Deepthi Madamanchi, & Cynthia Kuo, Study of Usability in Security and Privacy of Context Aware Mobile Applications (MobiCASE 2009)
The papers focus on mobility research conducted under Director Martin Griss for the 'Directed Research Project' course at the Silicon Valley campus. The course provides students an opportunity to work on individual and small team research projects, under the guidance of an experienced software researcher to produce meaningful research deliverables, such as concept demonstrations, prototypes, open source contributions and publication quality reports.
It should be noted that Carnegie Mellon has a prominent showing at the MobiCASE conference with twice as many accepted papers than any other participating institution.

