Keynote Speakers
Keynote Speech 1

Title: "Cooperation techniques in ad-hoc and
infrastructure-based wireless networks"
Speaker: Dr. Andy Molisch
Affiliation: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract: For almost a century, the paradigm of wireless
communications has been that different users and services
compete for resources, in particular spectrum and airtime.
However, in recent years, a new trend has emerged: wireless
nodes can collaborate, in order to enhance the performance for
all nodes.
In cellular communications, this paradigm has led to the concept
of base station cooperation, where multiple base stations are
connected through high-speed links, and thus form a "giant MIMO
system"; this essentially eliminates interference. The talk will
outline the principles of such networks, as well as signal
processing for exploiting its capabilities, as well as relevant
propagation channel models to evaluate its performance in
realistic situations.
We will then turn our attention to ad-hoc networks, where
collaboration of nodes in forwarding information can be used to
enhance the reliability as well as the energy efficiency of such
networks. We will outline the different physical-layer
collaboration methods, and discuss their impact on routing and
resource allocation schemes. An outlook to future research
challenges concludes the talk.
Biography: Andy Molisch received the Dr. techn., and habilitation
degrees from the Technical University Vienna (Austria) in 1994,
and 1999, respectively. After working at AT&T (Bell)
Laboratories, he joined Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs,
Cambridge, MA, USA, where he rose to Distinguished Member of
Technical Staff and Chief Wireless Standards Architect.
Concurrently he was also Professor and Chairholder for radio
systems at Lund University, Sweden. Since 2009, he is Professor
of Electrical Engineering at the University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Dr. Molisch’s current research interests are measurement and
modeling of mobile radio channels, UWB, cooperative
communications, and MIMO systems. He has authored, co-authored
or edited four books (among them the textbook "Wireless
Communications"), eleven book chapters, more than 120 journal
papers, and numerous conference contributions, as well as more
than 70 patents and 60 standards contributions.
Dr. Molisch has been an editor of a number of journals and
special issues, General Chair, TPC Chair, or Symposium Chair of
multiple international conferences, and chairman of various
international standardization groups. He is a Fellow of the
IEEE, a Fellow of the IET, an IEEE Distinguished Lecturer, and
recipient of several awards.
Keynote Speech 2

Title: Recent Advances in Broadband
Wireless Technology
Speaker: Prof. Fumiyuki Adachi
Affiliation: Dept. of Electrical and Communication
Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Tohoku University,
6-6-05 Aza-Aoba, Aramaki, Aoba-ku, Sendai, 980-8579 Japan
Abstract: Every about 10 years, a new wireless technology
appeared and significantly changed the mobile communications
systems. Mobile communications systems have been evolving from
1G to 3G to offer the users a variety of high speed data
communication services in addition to traditional voice
communication services. 3.5G systems with enhanced transmission
capability of around 14Mbps are rapidly deployed all over the
world. 3.9G or 3G LTE systems with a much faster data
transmission capability of 50-100Mbps will appear this year.
OFDMA and SC-FDMA both with simple one-tap frequency-domain
equalization (FDE) are adopted as the downlink and uplink
multi-access techniques, respectively. SC-FDMA has lower PAPR
than OFDM and this is the reason for its adoption for the
uplink. However, this data rate is not sufficient for the 4G
systems. The development of broadband wireless technology that
can achieve data transmissions of higher-than-1Gbps is
necessary. The wireless channel for such broadband transmissions
is severely frequency-selective. Frequency-domain wireless
signal processing may play an important role in achieving a good
signal transmission performance. Unfortunately, the available
wireless bandwidth is limited while a higher-than-1Gbps
transmission is demanded. Particular attention has been paid to
multi-input/multi-output (MIMO) multiplexing to significantly
increase the throughput without expanding the signal bandwidth.
Besides the broadband wireless signal processing, another
important issue exists. Broadband data services need
prohibitively high transmit power if the present network
architecture is employed. A new wireless network that can
significantly reduce the transmit power is required. An
introduction of distributed antenna network architecture is a
promising solution to this issue. In this talk, we will overview
the state-of-the-art broadband wireless technology.
Biography: Fumiyuki Adachi received the B.S. and Dr. Eng.
degrees in electrical engineering from Tohoku University,
Sendai, Japan, in 1973 and 1984, respectively. In April 1973, he
joined the Electrical Communications Laboratories of Nippon
Telegraph & Telephone Corporation (now NTT) and conducted
various types of research related to digital cellular mobile
communications. From July 1992 to December 1999, he was with NTT
Mobile Communications Network, Inc. (now NTT DoCoMo, Inc.),
where he led a research group on Wideband CDMA for 3G systems.
Since January 2000, he has been with Tohoku University, Sendai,
Japan, where he is a Professor of Electrical and Communication
Engineering at the Graduate School of Engineering. His research
interests are in wireless signal processing including wireless
access, equalization, transmit/receive antenna diversity, MIMO,
adaptive transmission, and channel coding.
He is an IEEE Fellow and an IEICE Fellow. He was a co-recipient
of the IEEE Vehicular Technology Society Avant Garde Award 2000,
IEICE Achievement Award 2002, Thomson Scientific Research Front
Award 2004, and Ericsson Telecommunications Award 2008.
Plenary Speaker

Title: "Views on Future Mobile
Communication"
Speaker: Shugong Xu
Affiliation: Communication Lab, Corporate Research, Huawei Technologies
Abstract: Wireless Mobile
communication has significantly changed our life in the past
couple of decades. In the same time, it also changed
dramatically the telecommunication industry along with the wave
of internet usages. Huawei, as one of the important
telecommunication venders, has experienced such changes and
challenges, while we try our best in serving our customers by
providing best products in kind. We know technologies are always
being pushed towards its limits. It is critical for us to learn
from the past and prepare for the future, together with our
academic and industrial partners, especially in the research
domain.
In this talk, we will discuss our views on the challenges and
opportunities for future wireless mobile communication. We will
review the needs from mobile end users, the mobile operators,
based on our understanding of the future usage of the wireless
mobile communication systems. Then we will outline about the
potential improvements in the mobile communication systems which
will be seen key technical areas to help in addressing the
future needs. In the second part of the talk, I will focus on
the Green Radio efforts which are becoming quickly a hot
research area. We will talk about our understanding on the
latest research developments in industry and academic on the
Green technologies, including those efforts inside Huawei.
Biography: Dr. Shugong Xu received his PhD from
Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China. He is
currently a Principal Scientist & Vice Director of Communication
Lab, Corporate Research, and Chief Scientist on Wireless Access
Technologies in the National Key Lab on Wireless technologies at
Huawei. Prior to joining Huawei Technologies, he was with Sharp
Labs of American for 7 years. In his 16+ years work on cutting
edge research on wireless/mobile networking and communication,
home networking and multimedia communications, he published more
than 30 peer-reviewed research papers as lead-author in top
international conferences and journals. And He holds about 30
granted US patents or patent applications. Some of these
technologies have been adopted in international standards like
802.11e, DLNA, and the latest 3GPP LTE. Dr. Xu is a senior
member of IEEE.
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