Arsalan Tavakoli

485 Soda Hall - RAD Lab
Computer Science Division
Berkeley, CA 94720

Contact: firstname @ cs.berkeley.edu


Overview
I am a second-year PhD student in the Computer Science Division at the University of California at Berkeley. My advisor is Professor Scott Shenker. My primary research interest is sensor networks, with a focus on architecture design.

Publications
Conferences and Workshops

A Declarative Sensornet Architecture
Arsalan Tavakoli, David Chu, Joseph Hellerstein, Philip Levis, Scott Shenker
In Proceedings of the International Workshop on Wireless Sensor Network Architecture (WWSNA '07)
Cambridge, MA, April 2007

A Modular Sensornet Architecture: Past, Present, and Future Directions
Arsalan Tavakoli, Prabal Dutta, Jaein Jeong, Sukun Kim, Jorge Ortiz, Philip Levis, Scott Shenker
In Proceedings of the International Workshop on Wireless Sensor Network Architecture (WWSNA '07)
Cambridge, MA, April 2007

An Architecture for Energy Management in Wireless Sensor Networks
Xiaofan Jiang, Jay Taneja, Jorge Ortiz, Arsalan Tavakoli, Prabal Dutta, Jaein Jeong, David Culler, Philip Levis, Scott Shenker
In Proceedings of the International Workshop on Wireless Sensor Network Architecture (WWSNA '07)
Cambridge, MA, April 2007

Some Implications of Low Power Wireless to IP Networking
Kannan Srinivasan, Prabal Dutta, Arsalan Tavakoli, Philip Levis
In Proceedings of HotNets V
Irvine, CA, November 2006

A Modular Network Layer
Cheng Tien Ee, Rodrigo Fonseca, Sukun Kim, Daekyeong Moon, Arsalan Tavakoli, David Culler, Scott Shenker and Ion Stoica
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI)
Seattle, WA, November 2006

Understanding the Causes of Packet Delivery Success and Failure in Dense Wireless Sensor Networks
Kannan Srinivasan, Prabal Dutta, Arsalan Tavakoli, Philip Levis
In Proceedings of the 4th ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (Poster)
Boulder, CO, November 2006

Entirely Declarative Sensor Network Systems
David Chu, Arsalan Tavakoli, Lucian Popa, Joseph Hellerstein
In Proceedings of International Conference on Very Large Databases (Demo)
Seoul, Korea, September 2006

Group-Based Event Detection in Undersea Sensor Networks
Arsalan Tavakoli, Jingbin Zhang, Sang H. Son
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop for Networked Sensing Systems
Los Angeles, CA, June 2005

Richer Semantic Representations of Simulations using DAML
Arsalan Tavakoli, David Chu, and Paul F. Reynolds
In Proceedings of the Spring Simulation Interoperability Workshop
Crystal City, VA, April 2004

The Ripple Effect: Automating a Multiresolution Model
Arsalan Tavakoli, Paul F. Reynolds
In Proceedings of the University of Virginia Undergraduate Research Symposium Charlottesville, VA, April 2003


Technical Reports / Other / Misc

Flush: A Reliable Bulk Transport Protocol for Multihop Wireless Networks
Sukun Kim, Rodrigo Fonseca, Prabal Dutta, Arsalan Tavakoli, David Culler, Philip Levis, Scott Shenker, Ion Stoica
University of California Berkeley Computer Science Department Technical Report
December 2006

The Design and Implementation of a Declarative Sensor Network System
David Chu, Lucian Popa, Arsalan Tavakoli, Joseph Hellerstein, Philip Levis, Scott Shenker, Ion Stoica
University of California Berkeley Computer Science Department Technical Report
October 2006

Understanding the Causes of Packet Delivery Success and Failure in Dense Wireless Sensor Networks
Kannan Srinivasan, Prabal Dutta, Arsalan Tavakoli, Philip Levis
Stanford Computer Science Department Technical Report
April 2006

Evaluation and Enhancement of a Unifying Link Abstraction
Arsalan Tavakoli, Jay Taneja, Prabal Dutta, David Culler, Scott Shenker, and Ion Stoica
UC Berkeley Computer Science Technical Report (Tentative)
December 2005

Object Classification in Heterogeneous Wireless Ad-Hoc Sensor Networks
Arsalan Tavakoli
University of Virginia Computer Science Department Undergraduate Thesis
May 2005

Wringer: A Wireless Debugger for Real-Time Sensor Networks
Arsalan Tavakoli, Sang Song
University of Virginia Computer Science Department Technical Report
December 2004