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End-User Behavior and Prospect Pricing in Wireless Data Networks


During the course of the project, several graduate and undergraduate students have been trained in an area of emerging interest, namely psychophysics and wireless networks. The following graduate thesis have resulted from this project:



Graduate Thesis:

  1. PhD Thesis: Mohammad Yousefvand, “Pricing, Recourse Allocation and End-User Behavior in HetNets,” Date of Completion: TBD.
  2. PhD Thesis: Mohammad Hajimirsadeghi, “Game Theoretic Approaches For Design of Information Centric Networks (ICN) And Spectrum Sharing,” September 2018.
  3. M.S. Thesis: Leonard Park, “Psychophysics Testbed and Experiments for Assessing End-User Perception of Video QoS over Wireless Channels,” May 2016.
  4. PhD Thesis: Neha Sinha, “A Continuous Dual-Process Accumulation Model of Recognition Judgments,” December 2015.

Additionally, the educational outreach includes instruction of graduate and undergraduate students through the Wireless Communications course taught by Mandayam and the Memory and Attention course taught by Glass.