NICTA Victoria Research Laboratory
Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
University of Melbourne
National ICT Australia (NICTA) plays a major role in the Australian Government's policy to promote science
and innovation. It is capitalising on Australia's extensive ICT talent through world-class research,
commercialisation, education, and industry collaboration.
In June 2004, National ICT Australia (NICTA) together with the University of Melbourne and Multi-Media
Victoria established the NICTA Victoria research laboratory. This laboratory is located in the School of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science on the Parkville campus of the University of Melbourne. We are
actively recruiting
graduate students to participate in our new and exciting
research programs.
NICTA provides leadership, critical mass, research directions and industry contacts, to maximize the potential for real-world impact. It is about fostering creativity, providing support for new ideas, and increasing Australia's pool of skilled ICT people.
It is broad enough to encourage the creation of fundamental
research, as well as having a strong drive toward "use-inspired"
research: the applied research that is necessary for economic
impact. The commercialisation of NICTA's research outcomes is
crucial for it to become an enduring research centre of
excellence, which is one of NICTA's key goals.
To create the necessary critical mass and potential for impact,
NICTA has focused on two "Priority Challenges": "Trusted Wireless
Networks" and "From Data to Knowledge". The mission of the first
priority challenge is to enable greater confidence, freedom, and
capability through improved efficiency, reliability, and security
of all wireless environments. The second priority challenge aims
to produce social, environmental, and economic value from the
gathering and use of information (further information on the web
at:
www.nicta.com.au.
The NICTA Victoria Laboratory has three research programs
addressing both priority challenges: Sensor Networks, Network
Information Processing, and Network Technologies.
Sensor Networks is a fascinating and important emerging area of
ICT with a predicted enormous economic and social impact. A sensor
network is a highly distributed estimation and control system,
which must operate using low power intelligent sensors and low
bandwidth wireless communication channels. The NICTA Victoria
Sensor Network Program will implement a major sensor network in
the area of environment monitoring, and will explore fundamental
aspects of large distributed networks of sensors. This program
opens up new research directions for control theory, network
information theory, and network computing.
The NICTA Victoria Network Information Processing Program focuses
on the management of data in large and complex networks such as
the Internet. It will develop the infrastructure for managing
these networks, and for performing computations over the network,
new techniques for data mining, for improving scalability and
robustness of critical network software, and improved mechanisms
for accessing knowledge stored on the network.
The NICTA Victoria Network Technologies Program will develop new
protocols and algorithms for high-speed optical and wireless
networks. Our approach is to build systems and measure their
performance: to understand the nature of network traffic, to find
the weaknesses in current protocols, and to design new ones.
Research on optical networks will focus on broadband access and
the monitoring and control of the optical network. Research in
wireless networks will focus on future wireless LAN technology
including networking and security issues.
Research in the NICTA Victoria Laboratory will be supported by a
Terabit Networking Laboratory, which will be linked to other
high-performance research networks around the world.