Martins Receives Grant for Animal-Borne Wireless Networks

Martins Receives Grant for Animal-Borne Wireless Networks

Martins Receives Grant for Animal-Borne Wireless Networks

Associate Professor Nuno Martins (ECE/ISR) is the principal investigator of a new National Science Foundation Cyber-Physical Systems grant, "Remote Imaging of Community Ecology via Animal-borne Wireless Networks.” The research will develop autonomous systems that monitor and protect endangered animal species.

The four-year, $1.8 million grant is a collaborative proposal with the National Geographic Society and ECE/ISR alumna Naomi Leonard at Princeton University. Leonard's Ph.D. advisor at the Clark School was Professor P.S. Krishnaprasad (ECE/ISR).

The grant establishes the first formal cooperation between the A. James Clark School of Engineering and the National Geographic Society. National Geographic will receive $1 million to construct the needed equipment and support its team. Both Martins' and Leonard's research groups will receive $400K.

The researchers will construct a wireless network of animal-borne embedded devices deployed and tested in a biologically-relevant application. The networked devices will provide geo-location data and execute cooperative strategies that save battery life by selectively recording bandwidth-intensive audio and high-definition video footage of occurrences of animal group behavior of interest, such as predation.

There are three concurrent and interdependent research themes:

• Investigating methods to design and analyze the performance of distributed algorithms that implement autonomous decisions at the mobile agents, subject to communication and computational constraints.

• Pursuing data-driven fundamental research on the modeling of animal group motion, promoting a formal understanding of the mechanisms of social interaction.

• Investigating methods for hardware integration to build distributed networks of embedded devices capable of executing the newly developed algorithms, subject to power and weight constraints.

 

September 8, 2011


Prev   Next

Current Headlines

Erika Moore Named to Science News 2025 “Scientists to Watch” List for Fibroid Research

UMD Distinguished University Professor highlights US-France Partnership in France Science Summit

AI Tool Reveals Gaps in Ancestry Reporting Across Biomedical Research

UMD Student Bridging Research Innovation and Education Advocacy

UMD Researchers Develop New Performance Metric to Optimize Elastocaloric Cooling Systems

UMD Team Contends in Semifinals of XPRIZE Competition to End Destructive Wildfires

With AI’s Help, Doctors Could One Day Press ‘Print’ in the Operating Room

Das Elected APS Fellow

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search News

Archived News

Events Resources

Events Calendar