Boon-Chong Seet

Boon-Chong Seet obtained his PhD in Computer Engineering from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, in 2005. Upon graduation, he was employed as a Research Fellow under the Singapore-MIT (Boston) Alliance (SMA) program at the National University of Singapore. In March 2007, he was awarded a visiting scholarship to the Technical University of Madrid, Spain, to pursue research under an EU-funded project on multi-disciplinary advanced research in user-centric wireless network enabling technologies (MADRINET). Since December 2007, he is with Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand, as a faculty member in its Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering. His research activities are mainly in the areas of mobile computing, mobile networking, and mobile communications.

Publications

Mobile Interactive Learning in Large Classes: Towards an Integrated Instructor-Centric and Peer-to-Peer Approach
Kin-Choong Yow, Boon-Chong Seet. © 2012. 13 pages.
This chapter aims at describing a new platform for mobile and interactive learning targeted as an effective communication medium between the professor and students during...
Mobile Interactive Learning in Large Classes: Towards an Integrated Instructor-Centric and Peer-to-Peer Approach
Kin-Choong Yow, Boon-Chong Seet. © 2010. 13 pages.
This chapter aims at describing a new platform for mobile and interactive learning targeted as an effective communication medium between the professor and students during...
Mobile Peer-to-Peer Computing for Next Generation Distributed Environments: Advancing Conceptual and Algorithmic Applications
Boon-Chong Seet. © 2009. 560 pages.
Peer-to-peer computing has gained significant attention from both industry and research communities in the past decade as the number of users worldwide continues to grow along...
Cutting the Gordian Knot: Intrusion Detection Systems in Ad Hoc Networks
John Felix Charles Joseph, Amitabha Das, Boon-Chong Seet, Bu-Sung Lee. © 2008. 16 pages.
Intrusion detection in ad hoc networks is a challenge because of the inherent characteristics of these networks, such as, the absence of centralized nodes, the lack of...