Embedded Networks and Applications Lab
Yale University

 

   

People

Andreas Savvides, Assistant Professor, EE & CS Dept.


Dimitrios Lymberopoulos, Ph.D. candidate
Thiago Teixera, Ph.D. student
Deokwoo Jung, Ph.D. student
Athanasios Bamis, Ph.D. student
Andrew Barton-Sweeney, MS Student

Reino Virrankoski, Ph.D student, Visiting Graduate Researcher from Helsinki University of Technology

Publications

Courses

EENG 460a / CPSC 436 / ENAS 960 Networked Embedded Systems and Sensor Networks (Fall 2004)

Software

Address-Event Imager Emulator for Sensor Networks

XYZ Wireless Sensor Node & Software

Medusa MK-2 Software
- GPS Module for MK-2

iMote2 Camera Sensor Network

Networking Events at Yale

Communications and Networks Seminar Series

Advanced Systems Group (ANTS)

Prospective Students

Contact Info. 

Andreas Savvides
andreas(dot)savvides_at_yale.edu
A. K. Watson, Room 212

Mailing Address

P.O. Box 208285
51 Prospect St. #212
New Haven, 
CT 06520-8285

Tel. (203)432-1275
Fax. (203)432-0593

ENALAB AKW 000
Tel. (203)432-0042

   

 

Welcome to the Embedded Networks and Applications Lab (ENALAB) website.  ENALAB's research focus is on embedded networked systems, ubiquitous computing and self-configuring wireless sensor networks.

ENALAB News

Research Projects

Sensory Grammars and the BehaviorScope

Lightweight-Event Driven Network of Biomimetic Image Sensors

ASPIRE:  Antipodal Staged Processing in Role-adaptive Embedded Systems

Self-Configuration Services and Application Support Constructs in  Sensor Networks
This project explores three main aspects of self-configuration in sensor networks i) Node localization and related calibrations, ii) group formation and iii) exploiting mobility in sensor networks

This project also investigates platforms and testbeds for research and experimentation in sensor networks. As part of this project, we are developing sensing platform architectures for mobile sensor networks. Our first platform under this effort is the XYZ sensor node.

Collaborators & Affiliations

 

ENALAB Research is supported in part by the National Science Foundation