Title: CITRIS Scientific Agenda
1UC Santa Cruz
CITRIS Scientific Program Overview Jim Demmel,
Chief Scientist www.citris.berkeley.edu
2Outline
- Scientific Agenda Overview
- Applications, Systems, Foundations
- Hardware and Software Building Blocks
- Sensor Networks, Handheld devices, Wireless
Networks, Clusters - Organizational Building Blocks
- Affiliated research centers and activities
- Financial Building Blocks
- Current grants, Fundraising opportunities
- Putting the Social into CITRIS
- Meeting Organization and Goals
- Testbeds talks, Application Breakouts, Charge to
participants -
3Scientific Agenda Overview
4CITRIS Scientific Strategy
Societal-Scale Applications
Societal-Scale Applications
5The CITRIS Model
- Distributed Info Systems
- Micro sensors/actuators
- Human-Comp Interaction
- Prototype Deployment
- Quality-of-Life Emphasis
- Initially Leverage Existing
- Expertise on campuses
- Energy Efficiency
- Transportation Systems
- Disaster Mitigation
- Environmental Monitoring
- Distributed education
- Distributed biomonitoring
Societal-Scale Information Systems (SIS)
Foundations
- Reliablity
- Availability
- Security,
- Algorithms
- Social, policy issues
Fundamental Underlying Science
6Initial CITRIS Applications (1)
- Saving Energy
- Smart Buildings that adjust to inhabitants
- Make energy deregulation work via real-time
metering and pricing - Large potential savings in energy costs for US
commercial buildings - Turning down heat, lights saves up to 55B/year,
35M tons C emission/year - 30 of 45B/year energy bill is from broken
systems - Transportation Systems
- Use SISs to improve the efficiency and utility of
highways while reducing pollution - Improve carpooling efficiency using advanced
scheduling - Improve freeway utilization by managing traffic
flows - Large potential savings in commuter time, lost
wages, fuel, pollution for CA - 15 minutes/commuter/day gt 15B/year in wages
- 600M/year in trucking costs, 150K gallons of
fuel/day - Disaster Mitigation (natural and otherwise)
- 100B-200B loss in Big One, 5K to 10K deaths
- Monitor buildings, bridges, lifeline systems to
assess damage after disaster - Provide efficient, personalized responses
- Must function at maximum performance under very
difficult circumstances
7Initial CITRIS Applications (2)
- Distributed Biomonitoring
- Wristband biomonitors for chronic illness and the
elderly - Monitored remotely 24x7x365
- Emergency response and potential remote drug
delivery - Cardiac Arrest
- Raise out-of-hospital survival rate from 6 to
20 gt save 60K lives/year - Distributed Education
- Smart Classrooms
- Lifelong Learning Center for professional
education - Develop electronic versions of UC Merceds
undergraduate CS curriculum
- Environmental Monitoring
- Monitor air quality near highways to meet Federal
guidelines - Mutual impact of urban and agricultural areas
- Monitor water shed response to climate events and
land use changes
8Hardware and Software Building Blocks
9Societal-Scale Systems
New System Architectures New Enabled
Applications Diverse, Connected,
Physical, Virtual, Fluid
10Experimental Testbeds in UCB EECS
Soda Hall
IBM WorkPad
Smart Dust
Velo
Nino
LCD Displays
MC-16
Motorola Pagewriter 2000
CF788
Pager
WLAN / Bluetooth
Smart Classrooms Audio/Video Capture
Rooms Pervasive Computing Lab CoLab
H.323 GW
GSM BTS
Wearable Displays
TCI _at_Home Adaptive Broadband LMDS
Millennium Cluster
CalRen/Internet2/NGI
Millennium Cluster
11Smart DustMEMS-Scale Sensors/Actuators/Communicat
ors
- Create a dynamic, ad-hoc network of power-aware
sensors - Explore system design issues
- Provide a platform to test Dust components
- Use off the shelf components initially
12Current One-Inch Networked SensorCuller, Pister
- 1 x 1.5 motherboard
- ATMEL 4Mhz, 8bit MCU, 512 bytes RAM, 8K pgm flash
- 900Mhz Radio (RF Monolithics) 10-100 ft. range
- Radio Signal strength control and sensing
- Base-station ready
- stackable expansion connector
- all ports, i2c, pwr, clock
- Several sensor boards
- basic protoboard
- tiny weather station (temp,light,hum,press)
- vibrations (2d acc, temp, light)
- accelerometers
- magnetometers
13TinyOS Approach
- Stylized programming model with extensive static
information - Program graph of TOS components
- TOS component command/event interface
behavior - Rich expression of concurrency
- Events propagate across many components
- Tasks provide internal concurrency
- Regimented storage management
- Very simple implementation
- For More see http//tinyos.millennium.berkeley.edu
14Emerging de facto tiny system
- Feb. 01 bootcamp
- 40 people
- UCB, UCLA, USC, Cornell, Rutgers, Wash.,
- LANL, Bosch, Accenture, Intel, crossbow
- Several groups actively developing around tinyOS
on rene node - Concurrency framework has held up well.
- Next generation(s) selected as DARPA networked
embedded system tech (NEST) open platform - Smaller building blocks for ubicomp
15Micro Flying Insect
- ONR MURI/ DARPA funded
- Year 3 of 5 year project
- Professors Dickinson, Fearing (PI), Liepmann,
Majumdar, Pister, Sands, Sastry
16Synthetic Insects(Smart Dust with Legs)
- Autonomous
- Articulated
- Size 1-10 mm
- Speed 1mm/s
17MEMS Technology Roadmap (Pisano/BSAC)
2010
MEMS Single Molecule Detection Systems
2005
MEMS Rotary Engine Power System
2004
MEMS Micro Sensor Networks(Smart Dust)
2003
MEMS Mechanical Micro Radios
MEMS Immunological Sensors
2002
18Organizational Building Blocks
19CITRIS-Affiliated Research Activities(please
send contributions!)
- International Computer Science Institute (ICSI)
(5 faculty, 18 students) studies network
protocols and applications and speech and
language-based human-centered computing. - Millennium Project (15 faculty) is developing a
powerful, networked computational test bed of
nearly 1,000 computers across campus to enable
interdisciplinary research. - Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center (BSAC) (14
faculty, 100 students) is a world-leading effort
specializing in micro-electromechanical devices
(MEMS), micro-fluidic devices, and smart dust. - Microfabrication Laboratory (71 faculty, 254
students) is a campus-wide resource offering
sophisticated processes for fabricating
micro-devices and micro-systems. - Gigascale Silicon Research Center (GSRC) (23
faculty, 60 students) addresses problems in
designing and testing complex, single-chip
embedded systems using deep sub-micron
technology. - Berkeley Wireless Research Center (BWRC) (16
faculty, 114 students) is a consortium of
companies and DARPA programs to support research
in low-power wireless devices.
20CITRIS-Affiliated Research Activities(continued)
- Berkeley Information Technology and Systems
(BITS) (20 faculty, 60 students) a new
networking research center will address large
emerging networking problems (EECS, ICSI, SIMS) - Berkeley Institute of Design (BID) (10 faculty) a
new interdisciplinary center (EECS, ME, Haas,
SIMS, IEOR, CDV, CED, Art Practice) to study the
design of software, products and living spaces
based on the convergence of design practices in
information technology, industrial design, and
architecture - Center for Image Processing and Integrated
Computing (CIPIC) (8 faculty, 50
students) (UCD) focuses on data analysis,
visualization, computer graphics, optimization,
and electronic imaging of large-scale,
multi-dimensional data sets. - Center for Environmental and Water Resources
Engineering (CEWRE) (9 faculty, 45 students)
(UCD) applications of advanced methods to
environmental and water management problems.
21Applications-Related Current Activities(please
send contributions!)
- Partners for Advanced Transit and Highways, PATH,
(20 faculty, 70 students), a collaboration
between UC, Caltrans, other universities, and
industry to develop technology to improve
transportation in California. - Berkeley Seismological Laboratory (15 faculty, 14
students) operates, collects, and studies data
from a regional seismological monitoring system,
providing earthquake information to state and
local governments. - Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center,
PEER ( 25 faculty, 15 students), a Berkeley-led
NSF center, is a consortium of nine universities
(including five UC campuses) working with
industry and government to identify and reduce
earthquake risks to safety and to the economy. - National Center of Excellence in Aviation
Operations Research, NEXTOR (6 faculty, 12
students), a multi-campus center, models and
analyzes complex airport and air traffic systems.
22Applications-Related Current Activities(continued
)
- Center for the Built Environment (CBE) (19
faculty/staff) provides timely, unbiased
information on promising new building
technologies and design techniques. - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL)
- National Energy Research Supercomputing Center
(NERSC) provides high-performance computing tools
and expertise that enable computational science
of scale - Environmental Energy Technologies (EET) performs
research and development leading to better energy
technologies and reduction of adverse
energy-related environmental impacts.
23Financial Building Blocks
24Large NSF ITR Award
- Not yet official, NO PUBLICITY
- 7.5M over 5 years
- Support for 30 faculty (Berkeley, Davis) for
subset of CITRIS - 2 applications
- Energy (Rabaey, Pister, Arens, Sastry)
- Disaster Response (Fenves, Glaser, Kanafani,
Demmel) - Most SW aspects of systems, no hardware
- Service architecture (Katz, Joseph)
- Data/Query management (Franklin, Hellerstein)
- Human Centered Computing (Canny, Hearst, Landay,
Saxenian) - Data Visualization (Hamann, Max, Joy, Ma, Yoo)
- Sensor Network Architecture (Culler, Pister)
- (in original proposal, reduced support)
- Collaboration with UC Merced
- www.cs.berkeley.edu/demmel/ITR_CITRIS
25Foundational Research Problems in ITR
- How do we make SISs secure?
- Tygar, Wagner, Samuelson
- Lightweight authentication and digital signatures
- Graceful degradation after intrusion
- Protecting privacy, impact of related legislation
- How do we make SISs reliable? (in original
proposal, reduced support) - Henzinger, Aiken, Necula, Sastry, Wagner
- Complexity gt hybrid modeling
- Multi-aspect interfaces to reason about
properties - Software quality gt combined static/dynamic
analysis - How do we make SISs available? (in original
proposal, reduced support) - Patterson, Yelick
- Repair-Centric Design
- Availability modeling and benchmarking
- Performance fault adaptation
- What algorithms do we need?
- Papadimitriou, Demmel
- Algorithm to design, operate and exploit data
from SISs
26CommerceNet Incubator
- Not yet Official, NO PUBLICITY
- 400K for one year
- State-funded NGI (Next Generation Internet)
incubator - http//www.commerce.net/
- At Bancroft/Shattuck in shared CCIT space
- http//www.path.berkeley.edu/PATH/CCIT/Default.htm
- Companies will incubate and collaborate with
CITRIS faculty and students - Kalil, Demmel, Sastry, Teece (advisors)
- Companies chosen for closeness to CITRIS
27Other support
- Long list, at least 30M
- Mostly technology, a few applications
- More pending
28Financial Building Blocks
- Funding Opportunities
- (courtesy of Tom Kalil)
29Next ITR Solicitation
- Small proposals (lt500K)
- Full proposal due February 6-7, 2002
- Medium proposals (lt5 million)
- Full proposal due November 13, 2001
- Large proposals (lt15 million)
- Pre-proposals due November 9th, 2001
- Full proposal sue April 4, 2002
30Next ITR Solicitation
- Software and hardware systems
- Augmenting individuals and transforming society
- Particularly relevant to apps thrust of CITRIS!
- Scientific frontiers and IT
- See http//www.itr.nsf.gov for more details
31Getting Funding for CITRIS
- Will need to engage broader range of funding
agencies, partners, and stakeholders - Examples
- Energy efficiency Energy
- Env. Monitoring Foundations, EPA, CalEPA
- Health monitoring New NIH institute, DOD
interest in combat casualty care - Transportation DOT, Caltrans
- Earthquakes FEMA
32Putting the Social into CITRIS
- Courtesy of Tom Kalil
- More input requested!
33Bringing the social into CITRIS
- CITRIS needs to engage
- Sociologists
- Economists
- Anthropologists
- Lawyers
- Political scientists
- Scholars of public policy
- Business-school faculty
34Possible roles for Social Scientists
- Address risks (e.g. privacy of sensor nets)
- Examine deployment issues associated with SISs
- Economic, social, legal factors in rate of
deployment - User-centered design (e.g. ethnography)
- Suggest new application areas or themes
- Broader ethical, legal, social implications of
the Information Revolution - See web page for more extensive document
35Meeting Organization
36Morning Talks on Research Infrastructure and
Testbeds
- Goal describe facilities available now or soon
- CITRIS Net Ben Yoo
- Microlab Costas Spanos
- Smart Buildings and Energy Management Ed Arens
- Hazard Mitigation Steve Glaser
- Transportation Karl Hedrick
- Biomedical Alert Networks Tom Budinger
37Noon Talks
- CITRIS Education Initiative Paul Wright
- The New Economy Brad DeLong
38Afternoon Breakout Sessions
- Topics
- Smart Classrooms John Canny, Pat Mantey
- Smart Buildings and Energy Management Jan
Rabaey - Hazard Mitigation Steve Glaser
- Transportation Karl Hedrick
- Biomedical Alert Networks Tom Budinger
- Environmental Monitoring Jay Lund
- Charge to participants
- Go forth and develop exciting interdisciplinary
research agendas and ideas for proposals - Come back at 315pm to tell everyone about it