International Workshop on
              ADVANCEs in ICT Infrastructures and Services, 
              26-29 February 2024, Hanoi, Vietnam
           
          Technical Programme
ADVANCE 2024 Draft Programme on glance:

Abstract: Recently, semantic
                  communication has attracted extensive attention from industry
                  and academia, and has been identified as a core challenge for
                  the sixth generation (6G) of wireless networks. The origin of
                  this concept is often explained by the fact that the ultimate
                  goal of communications is to exchange semantic information
                  while the communication medium can only transmit physical
                  signals. A better understanding can be obtained by the
                  following example: assume that some image / video transmission
                  is designed with the intent that the receiver is able to do
                  some classification... If the kind of classification is known,
                  the best thing to do is to classify at the transmitter, and
                  transmit the result. This is the same with speech
                  transmission: rather than transmitting the speech, just do the
                  processing at the transmitter and transmit the text. Things
                  become more intricate when one knows that classification will
                  not be the only processing to be performed at the receiver,
                  but is a priority or if the kind of classification is not
                  known. This is the motivation for our work: still transmit
                  information allowing to recover the original signal or image /
                  video, but design the transmission in such a way that the rate
                  is small, and that the received signal has good performance
                  for a given task. This will allow some other non-previously
                  defined tasks to be performed at the receiver side. This
                  situation is in contradiction with traditional image
                  transmission which initially concentrated on rate / distortion
                  tradeoffs, following the initial information theory results.
                  This work intends in some sense to make a first step in this
                  new direction while keeping a spirit very close to Information
                  Theory, even if it is making intensive use of machine
                  learning, and more specifically of Generative Adversarial
                  Autoencoders (GANs). Assume that some still images are to be
                  sent to some end user with a reduced rate, in such a way that
                  upon reception (i) they are “close” to the original one in
                  terms of distortion, and (ii) they should also allow some
                  efficient classification. In this kind of situation, our
                  ultimate goal is to search for the best “rate / distortion /
                  classification” tradeoff, an approach which is very similar to
                  the work of Blau and Michaeli on perception [CVPR 2018, ICML
                  2019]. Obviously, this setting is a much simplified situation
                  compared to the general setting of Goal-Aware Communications,
                  but it allows to derive precise results. This talk will
                  explain these ideas and the corresponding results on a toy
                  MNIST example. Clearly, our results are in a preliminary
                  status, but we believe they can be useful to this audience. 
                
                
Bio: Pierre Duhamel (Life Fellow IEEE, Fellow EURASIP) received the Eng. Degree in Electrical Engineering from the National Institute for Applied Sciences (INSA) Rennes, France in 1975, and the Dr. Eng. and the D.Sc degrees from Orsay University, Orsay, France in 1978 and 1986, respectively. From 1975 to 1980, he was with Thomson-CSF, Paris, France, where his research interests included circuit theory and signal processing. In 1980, he joined the National Research Center in Telecommunications (CNET), Issy les Moulineaux, France, where his research activities were mainly concerned with fast algorithms for computing various signal processing functions (FFT’s, convolutions, adaptive filtering, and wavelets). From 1993 to Sept. 2000, he has been professor with ENST (National School of Engineering in Telecommunications), Paris with research activities focused on Signal processing for Communications. He was the head of the Signal and Image processing Department from 1997 to 2000. He is currently with CNRS/LSS (Laboratoire de Signaux et Systemes, Gif sur Yvette, France), where he developed studies in Signal Processing for communications and signal/image processing for multimedia applications, including source/protocol/channel coding/decoding. He is also investigating the connections between communications, information theory and AI. He has been “directeur de recherches émérite” since March 2019. He has published more than 105 articles in international journals, more than 320 papers in international conferences, and holds 29 patents. He is a co-author of the book `Joint Source and Channel Decoding: A cross layer perspective with applications in video broadcasting" which appeared in 2009, Academic Press. He successfully advised or co-advised more than 65 PhD students, some of them being now fellows of the IEEE.
Keynote Talk 2 : Unlocking the Potential of
                      Blockchain in Healthcare
            By Pr Abdelhakim Hafid, University of
                    Montreal, Canada
Abstract: Blockchain can be simply defined as
              a distributed digital ledger that keeps track of all the
              transactions that have taken place in a secure, chronological and
              immutable way using peer-to-peer networking technology. The most
              known blockchain application is bitcoin that supports transactions
              of bitcoin transfer. However, blockchain is finding many uses in
              financial and non-financial applications; indeed, it is believed
              that blockchain will transform how we live, work, and interact.
              This talk will start with a brief introduction to Blockchain
              technology. It will explore the opportunities of implementing
              blockchain in healthcare. It will discuss the benefits of using
              blockchain technology and examine real-world examples of
              blockchain applications in healthcare. 
            
            
Bio: is a Full Professor at the University of Montreal. He is the founding director of Network Research Lab and Montreal Blockchain Lab. Prof. Hafid published over 260 journal and conference papers; he also holds three US patents. Prior to joining U. of Montreal, he spent several years, as senior research scientist, at Bell Communications Research (Bellcore), NJ, US working in the context of major research projects on the management of next generation networks. He advised and consulted for a number of companies and startups in North America. He co-founded Tipot Technologies Inc. (Research & Development Platform for IoT). Prof. Senhaji has extensive academic and industrial research experience in the area of the communication networks and distributed systems. His current research interests include Blockchain scalability and security, Blockchain disruption of various industry segments, IoT, Fog/edge computing, and intelligent transport systems.
            
     
            
Abstract: With the advancements of many
              technologies, the Internet of Things (IoT) opens a wide range of
              new applications such as smart appliances, smart cities and smart
              grids. Despite its popularity and usability, it also creates a new
              attack surface for hackers, especially on highly constrained
              devices that have limited memory footprints and processing power.
              This talk will overview the current state-of-the-art methods for
              securing ultra-low-power (ULP) IoT applications. In addition, it
              will discuss new challenges to secure power-harvested IoT devices.
              Finally, it shows an example of securing a highly constrained
              power-harvested Beat Sensor. 
              
            
Bio: Prof Duy-Hieu Bui received a B.Sc.
              degree in electronics telecommunication technology from the
              VNU-University of Engineering and Technology (VNU-UET), a member
              of Vietnam National University Hanoi (VNU), Vietnam in 2010, an
              M.Sc. degree in Network and Telecommunications from the University
              of Paris-Sud, Orsay, France, in 2012, and a PhD degree in
              Nanotechnology and Nanoelectronics from University Grenoble Alpes,
              MINATEC campus, France (in collaboration with CEA-Leti and
              VNU-UET) in 2019. He joined the VNU Information Technology
              Institute (VNU-ITI), Vietnam National University Hanoi (VNU) in
              2021. He previously worked at VNU University of Engineering and
              Technology (VNU-UET) (2010-2015; 2017-2019) on VLSI design for
              multimedia applications and at CEA-Leti, MINATEC, France
              (2015-2017) on low-power security hardware and hardware security
              for IoT. He has been a principal engineer in various projects on
              low-power hardware design for multimedia, security and artificial
              intelligence, including VENGME, ADEN4IOT, and SCAI. His research
              interests include hardware/software co-design and verification,
              embedded systems, low-power solutions for artificial intelligence,
              VLSI system/circuit designs for information security and hardware
              security. 
              Prof. Xuan-Tu Tran received a Ph.D. degree in 2008 from Grenoble
              INP (in collaboration with the CEA-LETI), France, in Micro Nano
              Electronics. He is currently the Director of the Information
              Technology Institute – a member university of Vietnam National
              University, Hanoi (VNU). He is also an adjunct professor of
              University of Technology Sydney, Australia. He was an invited
              professor at the University Paris-Sud 11, France (2009, 2010),
              visiting professor at Grenoble INP in 2011, visiting professor of
              UEC Tokyo in 2019. He was the Director of VNU-key Laboratory for
              Smart Integrated Systems (SISLAB) and Co-Director of the Joint
              Technology Innovation and Research Centre (JTIRC). He is in charge
              of CoMoSy, VENGME, ReSoNoC, IOTA, ADEN4IOT, Secu-IoT projects for
              embedded systems and multimedia applications. He has published 3
              books and more than 120 papers on international conferences and
              journals. His research interests include design and test of
              systems-on-chips, networks-on-chips, design-for-testability,
              asynchronous/synchronous VLSI design, low power techniques, and
              hardware architectures for multimedia applications. He is a Senior
              Member of the IEEE, member of IEICE and REV Vietnam. 
            
TECHNICAL PROGRAMME:
DAY 1: Monday 26th February
                        2024
                    
09h15-10h15 Keynote 1: Integrating the
                  Remote Use of Visual Information into the Design of a
                  Communication Situation 
                    By Prof Pierre Duhamel, CNRS L2S Laboratory, Centrale
                  Supelec, University of Paris-Saclay, France
             
                        10h15-10h45   Coffee break
              
              10h45-12h30    Technical
                        Session TS1 (Full Papers)
                        chair: Prof Paulo Rego (UFC, Brazil)
                      
Paper 1.1: Towards a
                        self-management supply chain business processes system
                        using blockchain smart contracts, Ahmed Zaki
                    Bennecer, Majed Abu Shamla, Nazim Agoulmine (IBISC,
                    University of Evry/Paris-Saclay, University, France) 
                    Paper 1.2: Trustworthiness Determination for a
                        Distributed Reputation Management System in VANETs,
                    Samira Chouikhi1, Lyes Khoukhi2,
                    Abdelhakim Senhaji Hafid3, Christophe Rosenberger4
                    (1: LIS3TN Laboratory, University of Technology of Troyes -
                    France, 2: Normandie University, ENSICAEN, UNICAEN, CNRS,
                    CREYG, University of Caen Normandie - France, 3: University
                    of Montreal - Canada, 4: Normandie Univ, ENSICAEN, UNICAEN,
                    CNRS, CREYG, Normandie University - France) 
                  Paper 1.3: Systematic Review of
                        Blockchain-enabled eHealth Applications: Metrics and
                        Research Opportunities, Maurício Moreira Neto
                    1,2, Emanuel Ferreira Coutinho1,3, Leonardo Oliveira
                    Moreira1,4, José Neuman De Souza1, (1: Federal University of
                    Ceará - UFC- Brazil, 2: Graduate Program (MS and PhD) in
                    Computer Science (MDCC) - UFC - Brazil, 3: Graduate Program
                    in Computer Science (PCOMP) - UFC -Brazil, 4: Virtual
                    University Institute (IUVI) - UFC - Brazil)
          
 16h00-17h00    Keynote
                      2: Unlocking the Potential of Blockchain in
                      Healthcare
                      By Prof Abdelhakim Hafid, University of Montreal,
                    Canada 
          
DAY 2: Tuesday 27th February 2024
 
                    09h15-10h15 Keynote 3: Securing Ultra-Low-Power Internet-of-Things
                      Applications. 
                      By Prof. Duy-Hieu Bui and Prof. Xuan-Tu Tran, VNU-ITI,
                    Vietnam
                  
 10h45-11h45   Technical Session
                      3  TS3 (Full Papers) 
                      Chair: Prof.  José Neuman De Souza (VNU-ITI, Vietnam
                    
Paper 3.1: Impact of
                        OpenTelemetry Configuration on Observability and
                        Telemetry Storage Cost of Microservices-Based
                        Applications, Francisco Gomes, Vinicius Gabriel,
                    Paulo Rego, Fernando Trinta, José De Souza (Universidade
                    Federal do Ceará, Brazil)
                    Paper 3.2: Intelligent Data-Driven
                        Architectural Features Orchestration for Network Slicing,
                    Rodrigo Moreira (Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Brazil),
                    Flavio De Oliveira Silva (University of Minho,Guimarães,
                    Brazil), Tereza Cristina Melo De Brito Carvalho (Escola
                    Politecnica da Universidade de Sao Paulo (USP),Brazil)
                    Joberto Martins (Universidade Salvador - UNIFACS, Brazil) 
                    
                    11h45-12h30    Technical Session 4 TS4
                      (Short Papers)
                  Chair: Prof Joberto Martins (UNIFACS,
                    Brazil)
                    
Paper 4.1: RANDAO-based RNG: Last
                        Revealer Attacks in Ethereum 2.0 Randomness and a
                        Potential Solution, Do Hai Son, Tran Thi Thuy
                    Quynh (1 : VNU Information Technology Institute, Vietnam),
                    Le Quang Minh (VNU University of Engineering and Technology,
                    Vietnam) 
            Paper 4.2: Blockchain and Smart
                        Contract for Trusted Decentralized Digital Genomics,
                    Adnan Imeri (LIST, Luxembourg), Nazim Agoulmine (IBISC,
                    University of Evry/Paris-Saclay University), Djamel
                    Khadraoui (LIST, Luxembourg)
 14h00-15h30    Short Courses
                      
                    Chair: Prof Duy-Hieu Bui (VNU-IIT, Vietnam) and Prof Paulo Rego
                    (UFC, Brazil)
                    
                    Short Professional Course 1 (room  1):
                    Introduction to Blockchain Technology: Concept and
                    Applications By Professor Hakim Abdelhafid, University of
                    Montreal, Canada (duration: 2x45') 
                  Short Professional Course 2.1 (room 1): Intelligent Network Communication Resource
                    Allocation with Applications by Prof Joberto Martins,
                    UNIFACS, Brazil (duration: 45')
                      Short Professional Course 2.2 (room 2): Introduction to
                      IoT and MEC (Mobile Edge Computing) Technologies By
                      Professor Nazim Agoulmine, IBISC Lab, University of Evry /
                      Paris Saclay University, France (duration: 45') 
                    
15h30-16h00 Coffee break 
                      
                      16h00-16h45 : Invited presentation  on Research
                        & Innovation in JGLab
                      by Prof. Jean-guy Fontaine (JG Lab, China)
                    
                  
 DAY 3: Tuesday 28th February
                        2024
            
                    09h15-10h15 VNU Msc Students Technical Session 1 (10' presentation /paper)
                        Chairs: Prof Trung Nguyen (VNU, Vietnam) and Prof
                      Pierre Duhamel (CNRS L2S, CentraleSupelec, France)
Paper 1.1: Cross Domain Object
                        Detection Benchmark, Kien Ho (VNU University of
                    Engineering and Technology, Vietnam) 
                    Paper 1.2: Deep Learning for Table Detection:
                        A Comparative Study on Efficiency with Increased Data,
                    Duy Anh Nguyen, Thanh Ha Do (Hanoi University of Science,
                    Vietnam)
                    Paper 1.3: Efficient strategies for federated
                    learning with communication constraints, Phan Dat,Thi Thai
                    Mai Dinh (VNU University of Engineering and Technology,
                    Vietnam), Jocelyn Fiorina (CNRS L2S Laboratory,
                    CentraleSupelec, University Paris-Saclay, France)
                   Paper 1.4: Enhancing
                        Traceability and Debuggability for Iptables-based
                        Firewalls, Duc Trung Vu, Xuan Tung Hoang (VNU
                    University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam) 
                    Paper 1.5: Matérn kernel for continuous
                      smoothness parameter in Gaussian process based algorithms,
                    Nguyen Tuyen Hoang (Data Analytic Center, Viettel Telecom
                    Hanoi, Vietnam), Emmanuel Vazquez (CNRS L2S Laboratory,
                    CentraleSupelec, Paris-Saclay University), Tran Quoc Long
                    (FIT, VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam)
                    Paper 1.6: Memory Management using USIM, Phong KIEU
                    (FIT, VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam)
                  
10h45-11h45 VNU Msc Students Technical Session 2 (10' presentation/paper)
                        Chairs: Prof Trung Nguyen (VNU, Vietnam) and Prof Pierre Duhamel
                    (CNRS L2S, CentraleSupelec, France)
          
Paper 2.2: Rate-Distortion-Classification tradeoff, Le Huy (Msc student Paris-Saclay University, France and VNU-University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam) , Pierre Duhamel, Armelle Wautier (CNRS L2S Laboratory, CentraleSupelec, Paris-Saclay University, France)
Paper 2.3: Scalable Gaussian Process for Large Datasets, Hoang Van Do (Data Analytic Center, Viettel Telecom Hanoi, Vietnam), Emmanuel Vazquez (CNRS L2S Laboratory, CentraleSupelec, Paris-Saclay University), Tran Quoc Long (IAI, VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam)
Paper 2.4: Scalable Point Cloud Coding for Reconstruction and Classification, Quoc Anh Le, Vu Ha Le (VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam), Mohamed-Chaker Larabi (XLIM, UMR 7252, CNRS XLIM, Université de Poitiers, France), Giuseppe Valenzise (CNRS L2S Laboratory, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris-Saclay, France)
Paper 2.5: Securing Channel State Information via Fake Path Injection in SIMO Communication, Trong Duy Tran (Avitech, VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam), Maxime Ferreira Da Costa (CNRS L2S Laboratory, CentraleSupélec, Paris-Saclay University, Linh Trung Nguyen (VNU University of Engineering and Technology, Vietnam)
Paper 2.6: Developing a Real-time Object Detection System on FPGA, Trung-Kien Nguyen (Viettel Aerospace Institute, Vietnam), Duy-Hieu Bui (VNU-ITI, Vietnam)
12h00-12h45 Networking and discussions with students
12h45-14h Lunch (end of ADVANCE'2024 Technical Programme)
14h00-17h00 Visit of VNU Campus and
                      Laboratories and Vietnam Museum of Ethnology
              
              
              

                
                      
Short Professional Course 1: Introduction
                        to Blockchain Technology: Concept and Applications
                      
                    
Abstract: This short course will
                  start with an introduction to Blockchain technology; it will
                  also briefly cover cryptographic primitives and consensus
                  protocols used to realize Blockchain. It will introduce the
                  concept of smart contracts which are fundamental to the
                  implementation of Blockchain applications.  It will
                  present the different categories of Blockchain. Some
                  Blockchain use cases will be presented. The course will
                  conclude with presenting the limitations and the future of
                  Blockchain.
                
                  
Bio: Abdelhakim Senhaji Hafid is a Full Professor at the University of Montreal. He is the founding director of Network Research Lab and Montreal Blockchain Lab. Prof. Hafid published over 250 journal and conference papers; he also holds three US patents. He supervised to graduation over 50 graduate and postgraduate students. Prior to joining U. of Montreal, he spent several years, as senior research scientist, at Bell Communications Research (Bellcore), NJ, US working in the context of major research projects on the management of next generation networks. Dr. Hafid consulted for a number of companies and startups in North America; he also has been given several talks/keynotes on Blockchain and its applications. He co-founded Tipot Technologies Inc. (Research & Development Platform for IoT). Prof. Hafid has extensive academic and industrial research experience in the area of the communication networks and distributed systems. His current research interests include Blockchain scalability and security, IoT, Fog/edge computing, and intelligent transport systems.

Abstract: The Internet and networks are evolving and expanding their utilization dramatically. New paradigms, new protocols, new intelligent solutions, and large-scale complex systems are emerging in various areas of our daily life. Researchers and engineers need to understand the current network evolution trends and to know what relevant new technologies are involved. This short course discusses network evolution and presents the adoption of Machine Learning, Network Slicing, and Software-defined Networking programming paradigms for communications resources in the context of Smart City projects and other relevant verticals. This will allow comprehension of how new technologies can improve system development and highlight their potential.
                
Bio: Prof. Dr. Joberto S. B. Martins is a Professor at Salvador University (UNIFACS) and holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of Pierre et Marie Curie - UPMC, Paris (1986). He is also an International Professor at HTW - Hochschule fur Techknik und Wirtschaft des Saarlandes (Germany) since 2003, Senior Research Period at University of Paris-Saclay in 2016, Salvador University head and researcher at NUPERC (Computer Network Group) and IPQoS (IP QoS Group) research groups on Network Slicing, Machine Learning, Resource Allocation, Bandwidth Allocation Models, Software Defined Networking, Intelligent Management, Smart Cities and Smart Grid. Previously worked as an Invited Professor at University of Paris VI and Institut National des Telecommunications (INT) in France and as a key speaker, teacher, and invited lecturer in various international congresses and companies in Brazil, US, and Europe. Member of the Board of Trustees of the Bahia State Research Support Foundation (FAPESB). Member of IEEE Smart City Committees and former member of IEEE Smart Grid Research.
                
                
                
                
Abstract: This talk aims to introduce the research activities in the IBISC laboratory around IoT, Edge Computing (a.k.a. Fog Computing), Cloud Computing and Artificial Intelligence and how these technologies are changing the game. The convergence of these technologies along with novel data mining and machine learning techniques is allowing the mass collecting of data and efficient reasoning on it to better predict the future, make better diagnosis, detect anomalies. Applications of these technologies in all verticals of the society such as health, transportation, business, etc is transforming in a significant manner the activities of these domains. This talk will give to the participants an insight of these technologies and these advances. This talk is open to specialists but also to novices in the area.
                Bio: Nazim
                  Agoulmine holds a PhD in Computer Sciences from the University
                  of Paris XI, France. He is a full professor at the university
                  of Evry Val d'Essonne / Paris Saclay University since 1992 and
                  a member of the IBISC Research Laboratory. Since Sep 2023, he
                  is the director of the IBISC research laboratory (+100
                  researchers). He is also the vice director of the Graduate
                  School of Computer Science of University of Paris Saclay for
                  International Relations. From 2019 to 2023, he was vice
                  president of the University of Evry in charge of International
                  Relations Strategy and deputy head of the IBISC research
                  laboratory. From 2011 to 2016, he was on secondment with the
                  French National Research Agency where he held several
                  positions: chair and vice-chair of the Digital Sciences and
                  Mathematics (NuMa) department (2011-2016), director of the
                  INFRA (Hardware and Software Infrastructures for Future
                  Internet) programme (2011-2013) and director of the INS
                  (Digital Engineering and Security) programme (2012). From 2013
                  to 2011, Prof. N.Agoulmine has directed the LRSM research
                  laboratory at the University of Evry. Prof N.Agoulmine has
                  leaded several European research projects in the area of
                  Networking.  Prof. Agoulmine published over 100 journal
                  and conference papers; He holds several patents in the area of
                  networking with Orange labs. 
