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Keynote Lecture
Distributed Estimation Using Wireless Sensor Networks

Professor Georgios B. Giannakis
University of Minnesota
USA
E-mail: georgios@ece.umn.edu
Abstract:
Envisioned applications of wireless sensor networks (WSNs)
include surveillance, monitoring and tracking tasks. These
motivate well decentralized estimation and smoothing of
deterministic and (non)stationary random signals using
(possibly correlated) observations collected across
distributed sensors. In this talk we present state-of-the-art
algorithms for consensus-based distributed estimation using
ad hoc WSNs where sensors communicate over single-hop noisy
links. The novel framework reformulates basic estimation
criteria such as least-squares, maximum-likelihood, maximum
a posteriori, and linear mean-square error, as decomposable,
constrained, convex optimization problems that are amenable
to distributed solutions. The resultant distributed estimators
are provably convergent to their centralized counterparts and
robust to communication noise. Besides stationary, the framework
encompasses adaptive filtering and smoothing of non-stationary
signals through distributed LMS and Kalman filtering.
Brief Biography of the Speaker:
G. B. Giannakis received his B.Sc. in 1981 from the Ntl. Tech. Univ.
of Athens, Greece and his M.Sc. and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering
in 1983 and 1986 from the Univ. of Southern California. Since 1999
he has been a professor with the Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at the University of Minnesota, where he
now holds an Endowed ADC Chair in Wireless Telecommunications.
His general interests span the areas of communications, networking,
signal processing, estimation and detection theory -- subjects on which
he has published more than 270 journal papers, 450 conference papers,
two research monographs and two edited books. Current research focuses
on wireless networks, complex-field and space-time coding, ultra-wideband
and cognitive radios, cross-layer designs and wireless sensor networks.
He is the (co-) recipient of six best paper awards from the IEEE Signal
Processing (SP) and Communications Societies (1992, 1998, 2000, 2001,
2003, 2004) and also received the SP Society's Technical Achievement
Award in 2000 as well as the EURASIP Technical Achievement Award in
2005. He is an IEEE Fellow since 1997, a Distinguished Lecturer for
2007-08, and has served the IEEE in various editorial and organizational
posts.
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