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Bu-Sung Lee

Researcher at Nanyang Technological University

Publications -  164
Citations -  2094

Bu-Sung Lee is an academic researcher from Nanyang Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Network packet & Wireless ad hoc network. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 164 publications receiving 1829 citations. Previous affiliations of Bu-Sung Lee include Hewlett-Packard.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Autoencoder-based network anomaly detection

TL;DR: An Autoencoder-based network anomaly detection method that is able to capture the non-linear correlations between features so as to increase the detection accuracy and outperforms other detection methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Short Survey: A survey of application level multicast techniques

TL;DR: This paper is among the first papers to provide a comprehensive survey of most of the various milestone research work in application level multicast in terms of both breadth and depth and classifies them into different broad categories based on their topology design, service model and architecture.
Journal ArticleDOI

DynamicMR: A Dynamic Slot Allocation Optimization Framework for MapReduce Clusters

TL;DR: An alternative technique called Dynamic Hadoop SlotAllocation is proposed, which relaxes the slot allocation constraint to allow slots to be reallocated to either map or reduce tasks depending on their needs, and form a step-by-step slot allocation system called DynamicMR that can improve the performance of MapReduce workloads substantially.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating and Improving the Performance and Scheduling of HPC Applications in Cloud

TL;DR: This paper performs comprehensive performance and cost evaluation and analysis of running a set of HPC applications on a range of platforms, varying from supercomputers to clouds, and presents novel heuristics for online application-aware job scheduling in multi-platform environments.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Who, What, Why, and How of High Performance Computing in the Cloud

TL;DR: Overall results indicate that current public clouds are cost-effective only at small scale for the chosen HPC applications, when considered in isolation, but can complement supercomputers using business models such as cloud burst and application-aware mapping.