We develop a network synthesis scenario, which is built around a concrete perimeter surveillance application, yet we believe captures a number of the challenges and requirements that are common to other tactical communication and computational network applications. The proposed scenario addresses the problem of binary population identification within a perimeter: our goal is to synthesize a sensing and computing network that classifies people moving within a given perimeter into one of two categories (e.g., friend or foe). We discuss several open challenges that we organize across the following clusters: sensor placement, communication network provisioning and optimization, computational task placement, dynamic re-synthesis and resilience under adversarial settings. We also briefly discuss approaches that attempt to address such challenges.
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