The S3 workshop provides a unique venue for graduate students around the world to discuss research ideas for mobile and wireless systems. The workshop is organized by a student-run TPC. S3 aims to foster early-career development among students, expose them to the workings of an academic life, and encourage student leadership and participation in the research community. We anticipate a vibrant event where students can freely interact with a broad peer group, and share their research opinions.
The Wireless of the Students, by the Students, and for the Students Workshop provides a unique venue for graduate students around the world to present, discuss, and exchange ideas on cross-cutting research on mobile wireless networks. As its name suggests, the workshop is organized by students, and the technical sessions are given by student presenters. The workshop aims at fostering early--career development among students and exposing them to the workings of an academic life. It provides a venue for students to learn about each other's work and discover opportunities for collaboration.
The workshop invites students to submit papers, posters, demos and participate in elevator pitch sessions. Students are also welcome to submit their ongoing work directly to the TPC committee. All submissions will be peer-reviewed by the student TPC. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
You can also present a poster or demo of your work. Demos and poster submissions should consist of a one-page abstract in the same format describing the demonstration plan or the outline of the poster content. We encourage students with a paper, poster, or demo at ACM MobiCom to present their work at S3 as well. We will be awarding prizes for the best poster/demo.
3MT is developed by The University of Queensland for showcasing research done by PhD reseachers. 3MT cultivates students’ academic, presentation, and research communication skills. The competition supports their capacity to effectively explain their research in three minutes, in a language appropriate to a non-specialist audience. Participating in 3MT develops academic, presentation and research communication skills, while developing research candidates’ ability to effectively explain their research in language appropriate to a non-specialist audience. Plus, it comes with the opportunity to win prizes!.
The title of these papers must bear a "3MT:" prefix and should be a one-page abstract with the same format for paper submission. Contestants should prepare a one-slide presentation of the topic they plan to present for maximum of 3 minutes during the ACM S3 3MT competition. You should adhere to the standard 3MT competition rules listed here. We will be using the standard judging criteria for 3MT competition at ACM S3 which can be accessed here. Awards will be announced at the end of the event.
Our panel discussions' format focuses on the Q&A style that we encourage more questions asked from the student audience. There will be a shortlist of curated questions from the moderator, and most importantly, we aim to allocate most of the time to the student audiences' questions. Please email chairs if you are interested to join as a panelist.
TPC members are also invited to propose potential talks. While the program committee and presentors will be restricted to current graduate students, we encourage all members of the wireless/mobile computing community to attend and participate.
All paper/poster/3MT submissions will be handled electronically at the S3 2023 submission website. Authors should prepare a PDF version of their papers. You may use these templates helpful in complying with the requirements. Paper submissions should be no longer than 3 pages in font size no smaller than 10 points, including figures and references, in standard ACM conference format. Demos and poster submissions should consist of a one-page abstract in the same format describing the demonstration plan or the outline of the poster content. We encourage students with a paper, poster, or demo at ACM MobiCom main conference to present their work at this workshop as well.
TPC Co-Chairs | Ish Kumar Jain | UC San Diego |
Akarsh Prabhakara | Carnegie Mellon University | |
Tara Boroushaki | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
TPC |
Abhishek Adhikari |
Columbia University |
TPC |
Aristide Tanyi-Jong Akem |
IMDEA Networks Institute |
Arushi Arora | Purdue University | |
Ashutosh Srivastava | New York University | |
Bangya Liu | University of Wisconsin Madison | |
Bei Ouyang | IMDEA Networks and UC3M | |
Changhan Ge | The University of Texas at Austin | |
Federico Cifuentes-Urtubey | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | |
Gwendoline Hochet Derévianckine | Semtech - INSA Lyon CITI lab - INRIA Lyon | |
Harshvardhan Takawale | University of Maryland, College Park | |
Laura Dodds | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
Maisy Lam | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
Maleeha Masood | University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign | |
Michail Dalgitsis | Nearby Computing | |
Milind Kumar Vaddiraju | University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign | |
Nakul Garg | University of Maryland College Park | |
Prerna Khanna | Stony Brook University | |
Raghav Subbaraman | University of California San Diego | |
Ruichun Ma | Yale University | |
Sigrid Dimce | TKN TU Berlin | |
Venkata Siva Santosh Ganji | Texas A&M University | |
Xumiao Zhang | University of Michigan | |
Zhihe Zhao | The Chinese University of Hong Kong | |
Zhiyi Zhang | Univ Lyon, INSA Lyon, Inria, CITI |
Carlee Joe-Wong | Carnegie Mellon University | |
Marco Fiore | IMDEA Networks Institute | |
Yasaman Ghasempour | Princeton University |
All paper submissions will be handled electronically at the S3 2023 submission website. Authors should prepare a PDF version of their papers. You may use these templates helpful in complying with the requirements. Paper submissions should be no longer than 3 pages in font size no smaller than 10 points, including figures and references, in standard ACM conference format. Demos and poster submissions should consist of a one-page abstract in the same format describing the demonstration plan or the outline of the poster content. We encourage students with a paper, poster, or demo at ACM MobiCom main conference to present their work at this workshop as well.
The S3 Workshop provides a unique venue for graduate students around the world to plan, manage, and experience a vibrant workshop focused on research in all aspects of mobile wireless networks. It encompasses both theory and systems research, exposing participants to the full breadth of research in networking. As its name suggests, the workshop is organized by students, and the technical sessions are given by student presenters. It aims to foster early career development among students and expose them to the workings of an academic life. It encourages students to actively participate in the networking research community and offers unique networking opportunities.
Sponsoring S3 will give your organization increased visibility within the computer networking and mobile computing community, especially among talented PhD students. Supporting this student-organized workshop will benefit the community of student researchers. This focused venue will be a great opportunity for companies to attract the future researchers to them. We will acknowledge all supporters during the conference opening remarks and prominently display company names and logos on the S3 website. You can also direct your funds to name specific awards such as Travel Grants (which will encourage huge participations), Best Papers, Best Posters, Best Presentation, Best Questions, Best Demos etc. With your sponsorship, S3 will give financial awards to the student attendees and TPC members, who otherwise may not be able to attend due to financial constraints.
S3 has been held in conjunction with ACM MobiCom, one of the most prestigious conferences in mobile networking, for the past 13 out of 14 years. Previous workshops have attracted over 60 participants, including several ACM MobiCom attendees. Traditionally, the workshop has been sponsored by ACM SIGMOBILE and industry partners.
Links to workshop homepages can be found below:
ACM S3 2022 in Sydney, Australia, with ACM MobiCom 2022.
ACM S3 2021 in New Orleans, USA with ACM MobiCom 2021.
ACM S3 2019 in Los Cabos, Mexico with ACM MobiCom 2019.
ACM S3 2018 in New Delhi, India with ACM MobiCom 2018.
ACM S3 2017 in Snowbird, Utah, USA with ACM MobiCom 2017
ACM S3 2016 in New York, USA with ACM MobiCom 2016
ACM S3 2015 in Paris, France with ACM MobiCom 2015
ACM S3 2014 in Maui, Hawaii with ACM MobiCom 2014
ACM S3 2013 in Miami, Florida with ACM MobiCom 2013
ACM S3 2012 in Istanbul, Turkey with ACM MobiCom 2012
ACM S3 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada with ACM MobiCom 2011
ACM S3 2010 in Chicago, Illinois with ACM MobiCom/MobiHoc 2010
ACM S3 2009 in New Orleans, Louisiana with ACM MobiHoc 2009.
9:00 - 16:00 |
WorkshopRoom: Plaza Mayor |
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9:00 - 9:05 |
Opening Remarks |
9:05 - 10:00 |
Keynote 1: Designing the internet of sustainable thingsAbstract: Sensor networks and miniaturized internet of things (IoT) devices have the potential to be transformative for advancing environmental sustainability by monitoring temperature, energy use, emissions, and even tracking wildlife for conservation; however the vision of producing and deploying billions of sensors also raises significant embedded carbon and e-waste concerns, particularly from the use of batteries. This talk explores how we can design battery-free origami robots that can change shape in mid-air for automated sensor deployment, miniaturized battery-free robotic sensors that can move on the ground, and how we can start using biodegradable and repeatedly recyclable materials to build these systems.Bio: Vikram Iyer is an Assistant Professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington. Vikram’s research takes an interdisciplinary approach spanning computer science and engineering, biology, and materials science to push the boundaries of technology. This includes building insect-scale wireless robots, cameras and sensors small enough to ride on the back of live insects like beetles, bumblebees and “murder” hornets, as well as biodegradable and recyclable circuits. Vikram’s work has been recognized by a Microsoft Research Fellowship, the Marconi Society Paul Baran Young Scholar award, the Sigmobile Dissertation Award, and best paper awards at Sensys and Sigcomm. |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Break |
10:30 - 11:30 |
Keynote 2: Novel PHY-Layer Architectures for Next-Gen Wireless Communications & SensingAbstract: The spectrum above 100 GHz offers plentiful bandwidth for ultra-high-speed communication and high-resolution sensing, thereby providing a promising foundation for realizing unprecedented capabilities in next-generation wireless networks. In this talk, I will begin by presenting emerging transceiver architecture that can enable directional sub-THz steering without traditional multi-antenna arrays. I will discuss how to exploit the key characteristics of sub-THz signals and the proposed architecture for high-resolution localization. Such sensing modalities can then be exploited to enable highly directional, high-data rate links that are robust to client and environmental mobility. I will address one of the main concerns with sub-THz networking which is high power consumption by introducing the first ultra-wideband retro-directive backscatter above 100 GHz. Finally, I will briefly cover some of our recent work on metasurfaces and their use cases.Bio: Yasaman Ghasempour joined Princeton University as an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering in January 2021. She received her Ph.D. and master’s degree from Rice University and her bachelor's degree from the Sharif University of Technology. Yasaman is the recipient of the NSF CAREER Award (2022), the 2020 Marconi Young Scholar Award, and the Excellence in Teaching Award (Princeton SEAS). Yasaman is listed as one of 10 stars worldwide in Computer Networking and Communications in 2022. Her group received the best paper award in USENIX NSDI 2023. Her research is focused on next-generation wireless networks and sensing systems, including novel devices and protocols for millimeter-wave and terahertz WLANs. |
11:30 - 12:30 |
Panel: First Steps to Future Success: A Panel for New Grad StudentsThis panel aims to provide guidance and support to early-year graduate students embarking on their research journey. We have Ph.D. graduates and senior Ph.D. student panelists sharing their experiences, challenges, and tips for success in graduate school. Their journey and insights can inspire and assist those just starting their graduate studies. |
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12:30 - 14:00 |
Break - Lunch |
14:00 - 15:00 |
Technical Session - Talks |
14:00 - 14:10 |
-Best Demo Award Raghav Subbaraman, Dinesh Bharadia (University of California San Diego) |
14:10 - 14:20 |
Federico Cifuentes-Urtubey, Deepak Vasisht, Robin Kravets (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) |
14:20 - 14:30 |
Ish Kumar Jain, Suriyaa MM, Dinesh Bharadia (University of California San Diego) |
14:30 - 14:40 |
-Best Poster Award Jingxian Wang (Microsoft Research), Yiwen Song, Mason Zadan, Yuyi Shen, Vanessa Chen, Carmel Majidi, Swarun Kumar (Carnegie Mellon University) |
14:40 - 14:50 |
Venkata Siva Santosh Ganji, P R Kumar (Texas A&M University) |
14:50 - 15:00 |
Gianluca Anselmi, Anna Maria Mandalari (University College London), Sara Lazzaro, Vincenzo De Angelis (Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria) |
15:00 - 15:05 |
Closing Remarks |
Best Demo Award: Configurable LoRa testbed for reproducible PHY and MAC research, Raghav Subbaraman, Dinesh Bharadia (University of California San Diego)
Best Demo Runner-up: A Compact and Real-Time Millimeter-wave Experiment Framework with True Mobility Capabilities, Ish Kumar Jain, Suriyaa MM, Dinesh Bharadia (University of California San Diego)
Best Poster Award: Wireless Actuation for Soft Electronics-free Robots, Jingxian Wang (Microsoft Research), Yiwen Song, Mason Zadan, Yuyi Shen, Vanessa Chen, Carmel Majidi, Swarun Kumar (Carnegie Mellon University)
Best Poster Runner-up: COPSEC: Compliance-Oriented IoT Security and Privacy Evaluation Framework, Gianluca Anselmi, Anna Maria Mandalari (University College London), Sara Lazzaro, Vincenzo De Angelis (Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria)
Best Poster Runner-up: Passive Device Identification with Packet Timing Analysis, Federico Cifuentes-Urtubey, Deepak Vasisht, Robin Kravets (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Congratulations to the winners!
ACM S3 2022 in Sydney, Australia, with ACM MobiCom 2022.
ACM S3 2021 in New Orleans, USA with ACM MobiCom 2021.
ACM S3 2019 in Los Cabos, Mexico with ACM MobiCom 2019.
ACM S3 2018 in New Delhi, India with ACM MobiCom 2018.
ACM S3 2017 in Snowbird, Utah, USA with ACM MobiCom 2017.
ACM S3 2016 in New York, USA with ACM MobiCom 2016.
ACM S3 2015 in Paris, France with ACM MobiCom 2015.
ACM S3 2014 in Maui, Hawaii with ACM MobiCom 2014.
ACM S3 2013 in Miami, Florida with ACM MobiCom 2013.
ACM S3 2012 in Istanbul, Turkey with ACM MobiCom 2012.
ACM S3 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada with ACM MobiCom 2011.
ACM S3 2010 in Chicago, Illinois with ACM MobiCom/MobiHoc 2010.
ACM S3 2009 in New Orleans, Louisiana with ACM MobiHoc 2009.