Webcast
The first two days of the ISMA 2006 WIT were webcasted and recorded. The third day, discussions and planning, was not webcast. The recorded webcast is archived and available on the Webcast Page.
Announcement
Internet topology analysis has recently experienced a surge of activity in
computer science, physics, mathematics, and statistics communities.
Notably, researchers are often approaching essentially the same problems from
different angles, but their findings are not always complementary and sometimes
even conflict, leading to inconsistent conclusions.
The Workshop on the Internet Topology (WIT) aims to bring together the most
active researchers from the involved communities. The main objectives of
the workshop are to promote synergy, enable interdisciplinary
cross-fertilization, and reveal common ground in different approaches.
The high-level program is to discuss recent advances, seek to resolve arguments,
and identify open problems that require further research.
There is no registration fee. However, registration is closed.
Program
The workshop will consist of a half day of tutorials and two days of
presentations. The tutorials will introduce field-specific details to facilitate
more efficient information and idea
exchange among participants with diverse backgrounds. Ideally, all
presentations should be targeted at participants from all four communities,
not just the presenter's own. Significant time will be designated
for group interaction among participants.
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Suggestions for tutorials:
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Computer science:
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Internet topology in reality
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State-of-the-art in the Internet topology measurement
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Physics:
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What does it mean for a model to be physical?
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Introduction to the principles of statistical mechanics
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Mathematics:
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The history of random graphs
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Topics of specific interest include:
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Problems with Internet topology measurements
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What has been the recent progress in measuring "missing links",
understanding sampling biases, etc.?
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Internet topology modeling and Internet topology generators
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What has been the recent progress in modeling the Internet
topology? What have we learned from these new
models/generators?
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Equilibrium vs. non-equilibrium networks
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All existing Internet topology models can be roughly split into two classes:
equilibrium models produce static (random) graphs and non-equilibrium
models try to mimic network growth. Both approaches have
advantages and disadvantages. Which one is more legitimate for
what type of problem? Which one is of more practical utility,
theoretical value, etc.? Is it at all possible to use equilibrium
models to describe growing networks?
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Correlations in networks
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The Internet is a correlated network. What progress has been made
in understanding properties of correlated networks? Can we
accurately model correlations? What errors do
we introduce if we neglect them?
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Interdependencies among network properties
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What network properties introduce what types of constraints to
what other properties? Is it possible to identify a small set of
network properties that define a larger set of other important
properties?
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Metric structure of networks
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Shortest path length (distance) distributions are important for
many networking applications and protocols. What progress has been
made in estimating distance-related characteristics in the most
popular network models and random graphs?
Submission instructions
The participants willing to make a presentation or give a tutorial should
submit 1-2 page abstracts.
Submissions must be in electronic form, as plain-text or PDF
documents, and they should be e-mailed to:
wit-chairs@caida.org. Abstracts will be selected based on their relevance
to the workshop program, and on the diversity of the covered
topics. Please, plan to give a 15-20 minute presentation or a 45-60 minute tutorial
that will be posted at the workshop's web page.
There will be no full-paper submissions or proceedings.
Important Dates:
- February 27, 2006 - abstract submission deadline
- March 17, 2006 - acceptance notification
- May 1, 2006 - registration deadline
- May 10-12, 2006 - WIT dates at CAIDA in San Diego, CA
Organizing and program committee:
- kc claffy (CAIDA, UCSD)
- Fan Chung Graham (UCSD)
- Marina Fomenkov (CAIDA, UCSD)
- Dmitri Krioukov (CAIDA, UCSD)
- Alessandro Vespignani (Indiana University)
- Walter Willinger (AT&T Research)
Sponsors
Funding for this event is provided by the the National Science Foundation (NSF), CAIDA sponsors, and by the San Diego Supercomputer Center.