Timothy D. Cole
CEO at World Bridge Innovations
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Area of Expertise:
wireless sensor networking (WSN) , laser radar , GIS , systems engineering , program manager , sensor web enablement
Publications (16)

Proceedings Article | 13 April 2010 Paper
Sadiye Guler, Timothy Cole, Jay Silverstein, Ian Pushee, Scott Fairgrieve
Proceedings Volume 7703, 77030C (2010) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.850655
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Video, Video surveillance, Cameras, Video processing, Sensor networks, Prototyping, Border security, Intelligent sensors, Surveillance

Proceedings Article | 28 January 2002 Paper
Timothy Cole, Richard Maurer, James Kinnison
Proceedings Volume 4547, (2002) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.454391
KEYWORDS: Calibration, Receivers, Asteroids, Space operations, Solar energy, Pulsed laser operation, Radiation effects, Oscillators, Semiconductor lasers, Backscatter

Proceedings Article | 19 September 2001 Paper
Timothy Cole, Maria Zuber, Greg Neuman, Andrew Cheng, R. Alan Reiter, Yanping Guo, David Smith
Proceedings Volume 4377, (2001) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.440105
KEYWORDS: Asteroids, Calibration, Space operations, Receivers, Pulsed laser operation, Backscatter, Semiconductor lasers, Avalanche photodetectors, LIDAR, Near field optics

Proceedings Article | 5 September 2000 Paper
Timothy Cole, Andrew Cheng, R. Alan Reiter, David Smith, Maria Zuber
Proceedings Volume 4035, (2000) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.397785
KEYWORDS: Calibration, Receivers, Space operations, Pulsed laser operation, Transmitters, Asteroids, Avalanche photodetectors, Sensors, Electronics, Data modeling

Proceedings Article | 29 July 1997 Paper
Proceedings Volume 10288, 102880G (1997) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.278755
KEYWORDS: Asteroids, Space operations, Instrument modeling, Performance modeling

Showing 5 of 16 publications
Course Instructor
SC948: Motes: Self-Organizing Wireless Networked Micro-Sensors
This course addresses the use of ad hoc network sensors to implement "smart" reconnaissance with various objectives: vehicular/personnel detection and tracking, persistent surveillance, perimeter control, and/or continuous event monitoring (including Military Operation in Urban Terrain, MOUT). The course presents the use of small (<30 in3) micro-sensors (referred to as "motes") within a wireless ad hoc network. The object is to perform tasks previously assigned to larger, more power hungry, sophisticated sensors such as imaging, acoustic, and/or seismic sensors. Through distributed processing of sensor signals within a networked field, motes can accomplish a myriad of tasks formerly relegated to larger sensors. Additionally, mote "fields" can be applied using numerous configurations that allow for novel security and/or military applications. This course introduces the technologies and markets that spawned mote-sized wireless sensors, discusses the design of motes and associated sensors, reveals the mote middleware functionality and implementation requirements, and provides insight concerning mote-field C2 interfaces. Examples are provided, with background information that presents low power ad hoc networking, mote-based sensor design rules, middleware implementations, and issues associated with data exfiltration and mote field deployment. Actual implementations of mote arrays in laboratory and field environments are reviewed along with underlying mote designs for specific applications. Efforts in self-organizing wireless networks stem from several sources: notably DARPA's Network Embedded Sensor Technology program http://www.darpa.mil/ipto/programs/nest/nest.asp (NEST) will be discussed.
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