• Signal Design for 6G Ultra-Reliable Wireless Communications

    Room: ENG460, Bldg: ENG building , 245 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    Next sixth generation (6G) wireless systems are expected to support ultra-reliable communications (URC) for data generated from various devices and applications. To achieve URC, various techniques can be used, such as multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), intelligent reflective surfaces (IRS), forward error correction coding, and automatic repeat request (ARQ). The design of resilient waveforms, modulation schemes, and multiple access techniques at the physical layer also plays a crucial role in the design of future 6G networks. However, most conventional techniques require significant overhead in terms of complexity, signalling, hardware, or power consumption. In this presentation, we will present a novel signal design that can offer about 40 dB of diversity gain without any additional transmission or hardware resources. The performance of the new scheme will be compared to other schemes. [] Speaker(s): Arafat Al-Dweik, Room: ENG460, Bldg: ENG building , 245 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

  • Signal Design for 6G Ultra-Reliable Wireless Communications

    Room: ENG 460, Bldg: ENG building , 245 Church Street, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    Next sixth generation (6G) wireless systems are expected to support ultra-reliable communications (URC) for data generated from various devices and applications. To achieve URC, various techniques can be used, such as multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO), intelligent reflective surfaces (IRS), forward error correction coding, and automatic repeat request (ARQ). The design of resilient waveforms, modulation schemes, and multiple access techniques at the physical layer also plays a crucial role in the design of future 6G networks. However, most conventional techniques require significant overhead in terms of complexity, signalling, hardware, or power consumption. In this presentation, we will present a novel signal design that can offer about 40 dB of diversity gain without any additional transmission or hardware resources. The performance of the new scheme will be compared to other schemes. [] Speaker(s): Prof. Arafat Al-Dweik, Room: ENG 460, Bldg: ENG building , 245 Church Street, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

  • Intent-Based Management for Next-Generation Networks: an LLM-centric Approach

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/427766

    Title: Intent-Based Management for Next-Generation Networks: an LLM-centric Approach Intent-based networking (IBN) is crucial in enabling autonomous networks by specifying goals and constraints at a higher level to the Network Management System. TMForum has specified a dedicated architecture and model that rely on Intents to handle and manage communication services, paving the way for autonomous systems towards 6G. Intents that represent an abstracted operational goal specified by the communication service owner, which is usually provided as input to the Network Management System (NMS). The latter, in turn, generates the necessary low-level configurations to fulfill these Intents. The current model of expressing Intents still requires significant effort in writing JSON and YAML structures, demanding a detailed comprehension of the format and model specified by the Northbound Interface (NBI). This process is sometimes not straightforward, and adhering to the structure of these NBIs takes time. A natural evolution for IBN is to move beyond human-readable languages and transition towards natural language. In this talk, we will discuss the evolution of Intents in 6G relaying Large Language Model (LLM) that translates human language into operational intents to deploy communication systems, leveraging few-shot learning and human-in-the-loop Feedback. BIOGRAPHY []Adlen Ksentini is a professor in the Communication Systems Department of EURECOM. He is leading the Network softwarization group activities related to Network softwarization, 5G/6G, and Edge Computing. Adlen Ksentini's research interests are Network Sofwerization and Network Cloudification, focusing on topics related to network virtualization, Software Defined Networking (SDN), and Edge Computing for 5G and 6G networks. He has been participating to several H2020 and Horizon Europe projects on 5G and beyond, such as 5G!Pagoda, 5GTransformer, 5G!Drones, MonB5G, ImagineB5G, 6GBricks, 6G-Intense, Sunrise-6G and AC3. He is the technical manager of 6G-Intense and AC3, on zero-touch management of 6G resources and applications, and Cloud Edge Continuum, respectively. He is interested in the system and architectural issues but also in algorithm problems related to those topics, using Markov Chains, Optimization algorithms, and Machine Learning (ML). Adlen Ksentini has given several tutorials in IEEE international conferences, IEEE Globecom 2015, IEEEE CCNC 2017/2018/2023, IEEE ICC 2017, IEEE/IFIP IM 2017, IEEE School 2019. Adlen Ksentini is a member of the OAI board of directors, where he is in charge of OAI 5G Core Network and ORAN management (O1, E2) for OAI RAN activities. Speaker(s): Adlen, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/427766

  • Sleep, The Reflection of Health

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/423915

    Join the IEEE Toronto Instrumentation & Measurement – Robotics & Automation Joint Chapter for a talk on the Sleep, The Reflection of Health, presented by Dr. Nasim Montazeri from Queen's University. Wednesday, July 24, 2024 @ 4:30 – 5:30 PM Abstract: While sufficient sleep is one of the health pillars, disrupted sleep is linked to adverse health related problems ranging from developmental impairment in children to cardiorespiratory diseases in adults and cognitive decline in older adults. The gold standard in-lab sleep test is inconvenient, expensive and has a long waiting list, making sleep monitoring inaccessible. This talk will highlight the role of new technologies in expanding the scope of sleep monitoring, with a particular focus on solutions enabled by signal processing and artificial intelligence. Dr. Montazeri will present the entire development cycle of a portable sleep monitoring device from crude observation to commercialization and draw examples from different age groups that demonstrate how sleep, when analyzed using customized analytic techniques, can reflect health. Speaker(s): Nasim Montazeri, Ph.D. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/423915

  • Walking with Robots

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/425309

    [] Join the IEEE Toronto Instrumentation & Measurement – Robotics & Automation Joint Chapter for a talk on the Walking with Robots, presented by Dr. Amy R. Wu from Queen's University. Wednesday, July 31, 2024 @ 5:00 – 6:00 PM Abstract: A world embedded with robots seems inevitable. One challenge, however, is designing robots to work with us, not against us. It is unclear how assistive robots, such as robot companions, would affect activities of human daily living, such as walking. To inform the design of controllers that enable seamless human-robot interaction during walking tasks, we first sought to determine whether legged robots could affect human walking behavior. Robots have the potential to greatly improve human lives, but we should ensure they are designed to interact well with us to minimize mechanical and possibly energetically related consequences from human-robot interaction. In this talk, Dr. Amy R. Wu will discuss two studies they conducted with human participants and quadrupedal robots walking side-by-side. They compared human behavior with and without the robot and found that legged robots can affect human gait even without physical interactions, which has implications for the design of robot companions or monitoring robots. Speaker(s): Amy R. Wu, PhD, P.L.Eng Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/425309

  • Federated Learning in Resource Limited Wireless Networks

    Room: 460, Bldg: ENG, 245 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5B 1Z4

    Federated learning (FL) is an efficient and privacy-preserving distributed learning paradigm that enables massive edge devices to train machine learning models collaboratively. Although various communication schemes and algorithm designs have been proposed to expedite the FL process in resource-limited wireless networks, the unreliable nature of wireless channels, device heterogeneity, and data heterogeneity are still less explored. In this talk, number of solutions solutions will be discussed for addressing the above practical challenges in wireless FL. Firstly, to tackle the unreliable wireless channels, a novel FL framework, namely FL with gradient recycling (FL-GR), which recycles the historical gradients of unscheduled and transmission-failure devices to improve the learning performance of FL will be discussed. Secondly, to solve the heterogeneity issues, partial model aggregation, knowledge aided learning and adaptive model pruning-based FL framework will be explained. Based on our research experience, some open problems of wireless FL will be provided. Speaker(s): Professor Arumugam , Room: 460, Bldg: ENG, 245 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5B 1Z4

  • IEEE Canada Blockchain Forum 2024 (2nd edition)

    Room: Suite 300, 325 Front Street West, 3rd floor, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5V 2Y1

    The IEEE Blockchain Forum is returning as part of (https://www.canadacryptoweek.com/) for a second edition. The goal of this forum is to congregate BUIDLers, researchers, academics, and engineers building blockchain protocols, infrastructure, and decentralized software applications. Our theme for this year is Securing Blockchain infrastructure for the Financial Services Industry. Since our last gathering, two ETF launches brought the crypto industry a mile or two closer to mass adoption. The ranks of institutional players such as JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Société Générale (socgen), and others keep growing. Beyond the realm of finance, enterprise blockchain has found its way to the technology stack of industry leaders as diverse as Toyota, L'Oréal, Visa, and Samsung to name few. Still, this technology is fairly new. For example, the Ethereum network (the world computer doted with a Turing-complete programming language) went live only 9 years ago, on July 30th, 2015. A lot more work is required for the technology to mature, particularly on the cybersecurity front. Although the public chains have proven reliable in securing assets, bridges and other smart contracts have proven to be less worthy of trust. As blockchain technology becomes one of the key issues shaping the public discourse during the US presidential election, industry leaders will soon be faced by questions regarding quality of service, ethical use, and its level of security. This forum invites researchers and engineers to share their research and best practices to secure blockchain infrastructure for the core services our industry and our society rely upon, starting with the financial services. Speakers include - David Barreto, Developer Advocate at Starknet Foundation - Baltazar Rodriguez, Acting Head at the BIS Toronto Innovation Hub - Dr. Soosan Naderi, Blockchain Director at Cyber Security Global Alliance (CSGA) - Zhiyang Chen, PhD student at University of Toronto - Adit Patel, Co-founder of Blockscope - Irene Katzela, CTO at Dandelion - Marc Lijour, Financial Services Innovation at Exaion and Adjunct Faculty at International Business University - Christian St. Louis, Data & Research at Ethereal Ventures - Andres Assmus, CEO at CityZeen - Sam Drissi, CEO at Artizyou - Opinder Preet Singh, Founder & CEO at PropTy - Ehsan Shariati, COO and Co-founder at Functionland - Géraldine Jippé, COO and co-founder of AssetsWaves - Dr. Keerthi Nelaturu, Technical Advisor at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Co-sponsored by: Ontario Centre of Innovation, Exaion, Starknet, InCyber Forum North America Speaker(s): Baltazar Rodriguez, David Barreto, Soosan Naderi, Zhiyang Chen, Marc Lijour, Irene Katzela Agenda: Agenda 1pm - 1:15 pm Welcome and introductions - Marc Lijour and Irene Katzela, co-chairs of the Toronto IEEE Blockchain local group 1:15 pm - 1:30 pm Welcome from our sponsor and host: Ontario Centre of Innovation (OCI) 1:30pm - 2pm Talk #1: Evolving Financial Landscapes: A Pragmatic Approach to Blockchain Integration By Baltazar Rodriguez, Acting Head, BIS Innovation Hub Toronto 1:30pm - 2pm Talk #2: Cairo, a general purpose CPU for creating verifiable programs By David Barreto, Developer Advocate at Starknet Foundation 2pm - 2:30 pm Panel discussion - Securing public blockchains Moderator: Marc Lijour Panelists: David Barreto, Adit Patel, Soosan Naderi, Zhiyang Chen, Christian St. Louis, Ehsan Shariati 2:30pm - 3pm Talk #3: Data propagation, security and consensus in Ethereum network By Soosan Naderi, PhD, Blockchain Director at Cyber Security Global Alliance (CSGA) 3 pm - 3:30 pm Talk #4: Demystifying Invariant Effectiveness for Securing Smart Contracts By Zhiyang Chen, PhD student at the University of Toronto and Research Engineer at Zircuit 3:30pm - 4 pm Panel discussion - RWA Tokenization Moderator: Marc Lijour Panelists: Opinder Preet Singh, Sam Drissi, Andres Assmus, Dr. Irene Katzela, Géraldine Jippé 4 pm - 5 pm Networking Room: Suite 300, 325 Front Street West, 3rd floor, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5V 2Y1

  • Introduction to Digital Marketing: Building Your Online Presence

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/430054

    Join this virtual workshop to explore essential platforms and strategies for building your online presence. Delve into Meta Ads creation, optimization, and analytics, and gain the skills to craft compelling campaigns. Learn to navigate additional advertising platforms such as Google Ads and master the fundamentals of Google SEO. Discover which platform best suits your unique needs and how to effectively utilize them to enhance your online presence. Whether you're a beginner or looking to refine your digital marketing skills, this workshop will provide you with the knowledge and tools to succeed in the digital world. Speaker(s): , Ayda Naseri Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/430054

  • Supporting Patient-Clinician Collaboration on Shared Surfaces

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/423931

    [] Join the IEEE Toronto Instrumentation & Measurement – Robotics & Automation Joint Chapter for a talk on the Supporting Patient-Clinician Collaboration on Shared Surfaces, presented by Dr. Fateme Rajabiyazdi from Carleton University. Tuesday, August 20, 2024 @ 4:00 – 5:00 PM Abstract: Patient health data needs to be discussed between patients and clinicians to make treatment decisions, inform lifestyle changes and improve care management. Sharing this data is necessary to allow for the simultaneous review of, interaction with, and manipulation of the data. However, there is a lack of meaningful collaboration and appropriate technological tools to enable close interactions between the clinical team and patients. Standard technological devices (i.e., a computer, a desktop monitor) and systems (i.e., electronic health records) that are available in clinics do not have the capabilities to facilitate a patient’s view or understanding of the data, nor interactions with their data. As a result, patients are not empowered to share health responsibilities with clinicians to discuss and make clinical care decisions. In this talk, Dr. Rajabiyazdi will discuss their progress in designing innovative technological data-centric systems displaying patient health data on shared surfaces to empower patient-clinician interaction using an iterative people-centered method. Speaker(s): Fateme Rajabiyazdi, Ph.D., P.Eng. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/423931

  • Analog Optical Computing for sustainable AI and beyond

    Bldg: McConnell Engineering building, , Room MC603, 6th floor, 817 Sherbrooke St W, , Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 0C3, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/430520

    Abstract : Digital computing is approaching its fundamental limits just as compute-intensive workloads like machine learning are taking off. To address this, we are building a new kind of computer–an analog optical computer–to accelerate AI inference and hard optimization workloads. The computer has the potential to improve the efficiency and sustainability of these workloads by around 100x by stepping away from several fundamentally limiting aspects of general-purpose digital computing. It leverages chip-scale optical and electronic technologies from the consumer space that are low cost and scalable. In this talk, I will describe two generations of this computer that we have built, outline our roadmap for scaling, and discuss the importance of hardware-software co-design for such emerging computers and their potential for accelerating real-world problems in the post-Moore Law’s era. Speaker(s): Dr. Hitesh Ballani, Bldg: McConnell Engineering building, , Room MC603, 6th floor, 817 Sherbrooke St W, , Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 0C3, Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/430520

  • Materials As Machines

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/424150

    []Join the IEEE Toronto Instrumentation & Measurement – Robotics & Automation Joint Chapter for a talk on the Materials As Machines, presented by Dr. Irina Garces from Carleton University. Wednesday, August 21, 2024 @ 4:30 – 5:30 PM Abstract: The Materials as Machines Lab specializes in developing systems and devices geared toward producing material systems that can adapt or be tailored to variable operating conditions. Our focus lies in the development of smart material systems applicable across a spectrum of fields, including deployable actuators, manipulators, soft robotics, wearables, and biomedical applications. Leveraging additive manufacturing, these innovative material systems offer practical, cost-effective solutions for engineering challenges. By integrating sensors into multifunctional actuating materials, we create dynamic structures and assemblies capable of self-sensing and adaptation. In this presentation, Dr. Garces will present their ongoing research on self-sensing actuation, tailored additive manufacturing, and explore the transformative potential of this technology in prosthetics, and examine its diverse applications across industries. Speaker(s): Irina Garces, Ph.D. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/424150

  • Digital Marketing in Tech: From Basics to Advanced Strategies (IEEE Member Exclusive Registration)

    Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/420731

    Join our six-class workshop that dives into the essentials of digital marketing for tech professionals. You'll explore key platforms and strategies, starting with an introduction to digital marketing, followed by comprehensive sessions on Meta Ads creation, optimization, and analytics. Learn to navigate additional advertising platforms like Google Ads, LinkedIn Ads, and discover how to harness the power of management tools for streamlined campaign management. By the end, you'll understand how to effectively plan and execute a cohesive digital marketing campaign while staying ahead of future trends. Plus, by joining these workshops, you will have access to an exclusive Slack channel along with other experts in digital marketing, where you can share and discuss real-life examples and interesting related information. You will receive a certificate of completion from IEEE, and this workshop can count towards your training hours for Optional CPD. Whether you're new to digital marketing or seeking to sharpen your skills, this workshop has something for you. [] Agenda: Duration: 1 hour 15 minutes each session. - September 5: Introduction to Digital Marketing - Explore digital marketing fundamentals and their business relevance. - Discuss various channels including SEO, PPC, social media, and content marketing. - Understand differences between B2B and B2C strategies. - September 12: Deep Dive into Meta Ads - Create effective Facebook and Instagram ads, focusing on format and content. - Master audience targeting and segmentation. - September 19: Analyzing and Optimizing Meta Ads - Understand essential ad metrics (CTR, CPC, conversion rates). - Apply optimization techniques and data-driven improvements. - Learn A/B testing methods to boost ad results. - September 26: Introduction to Other Advertising Platforms - Dive into Google Ads, exploring Keyword Planner and Google Trends. - Discuss successful campaign examples and challenges. - October 03: Expanding to Other Advertising Platforms - Overview of LinkedIn Ads, Twitter Ads, YouTube Ads. - Comparative analysis to guide platform selection. - October 10: Using Management Platforms and Tools + Putting It All Together - Explore management tools like Hootsuite, Buffer, and Google Analytics. - Integrate various digital marketing platforms effectively. Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/420731