Monitoring and control of cyber-physical systems.
This project, investigating active building facades that proactively contribute to energy conservation by changing their opacity and air permeability as a function of environmental and user parameters, promises to contribute strongly to both the cyber and physical sciences. Often energy is wasted when parts of a building are heated or cooled, but are not actually used, or when they are actively cooled if simply opening a window would suffice. The proposed "Self-Organizing Amorphous Facades" (SOAF) consist of a large number of identical cells that can each change their opacity and air permeability, sense light, temperature, and occupancy, and communicate with each other in a distributed collective. For complex cyber physical systems, this promises to provide a novel design methodology that is potentially applicable to a large class of systems and, therefore, will result in foundational knowledge of use to the community at large. This high-risk, high-reward project integrates ideas from computer science and engineering, with a little human physiology and environmental science thrown in, to develop new theoretical foundations for the design, validation, and improvement of coordination strategies for multi-agent robotic systems. The project's intellectual merit lies in novel algorithms that allow one to take advantage of distributed computation to drastically reduce the dimensionality of the data coming from the system, and novel algorithms that turn low-dimensional control data to the system into high-dimensional control signals. In particular, this research focuses on distributed algorithms that can identify regions that share similar spatio-temporal data, distributed algorithms that recognize patterns and gestures in spatio-temporal data sets, and distributed algorithms that automatically derive distributed policies for global control signals on temperature and light. Broader Impacts: The direct impact of this project will be huge potential reduction in the energy footprint of modern buildings by active lighting and ventilation control. A related impact is the introduction of novel ways of using space using truly reconfigurable walls. Due to its interdisciplinary nature spanning computer science and civil engineering together with its positive environment implications, this project is likely to be attractive to students with a broad range of backgrounds and interests. It will lead to educational modules that let students explore energy, heat transfer and solar gains in a building using sensors, wireless technologies, and algorithms, and introduce students to the challenges of complex cyber-physical systems. The PI proposes outreach to women and minorities and suggests a novel mechanism of comic distribution via HowToons.com that will make technical results and environmental impact of CPS accessible to a wide audience.
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University of Colorado at Boulder
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National Science Foundation
Gregor Henze
Nikolaus Correll Submitted by Nikolaus Correll on December 18th, 2015
This project, generalizing mean-field approaches from physics and chemistry for integrated design of scalable, network resource aware, distributed control strategies for multi-agent robotic systems, aims to develop macroscopic models that retain salient features of the underlying multi-agent robotic system and use these models in the design of distributed control strategies. For complex cyber physical systems, this promises to provide a novel design methodology that is potentially applicable to a large class of systems and, therefore, will result in foundational knowledge of use to the community at large. This high-risk, high-reward project integrates ideas from physics, chemistry, control theory, and robotics to develop new theoretical foundations for the design, validation, and improvement of coordination strategies for multi-agent robotic systems. The project's intellectual merit lies in the ensemble approach towards the design, validation, and improvement of cyber physical systems. Mean-field methods provide a system-level abstraction of the underlying distributed system while retaining the salient features of the various agent-level interactions. The generalization of these models to ensembles of interacting engineered systems provides new methods for designing distributed controllers that are sensitive to changing network resources and whose performance can be predicted and adjusted to achieve both the desired short-term and long-term performance specifications. Broader Impacts: The broader impacts of this project are twofold. First, the mean-field approach takes into account network resource usage and management, providing an integrated strategy for designing scalable decentralized control and coordination strategies. Second, different from biologically-inspired approaches, the mean-field approach enables the design of distributed coordination strategies whose performance can be systematically predicted and tuned to meet detailed performance specifications. This has the potential to unify various existing multi-agent coordination approaches. The research outcomes will be disseminated through publications in technical conferences and journals and incorporated into the PI's existing undergraduate and graduate curriculum and K-12 outreach efforts targeted at increasing female participation in STEM fields.
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Drexel University
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National Science Foundation
M. Ani Hsieh Submitted by M. Ani Hsieh on December 18th, 2015
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ETFA 2016
21th IEEE International Conference on Emerging Technologies & Factory Automation (ETFA 2016) Berlin, Germany | 6-9 September 2016 | Web site: http://www.etfa2016.org/
Submitted by Anonymous on December 4th, 2015
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RAC 2016
First International workshop on Resource Aware Computing (RAC2016) An ETAPS2016 Event.  |  ENTCS publication. RAC2016 is supported by ICT COST Action IC1202 Timing Analysis on Code-Level (TACLe). WORKSHOP OBJECTIVES AND SCOPE
Submitted by Anonymous on December 4th, 2015
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ICGT 2016
9th International Conference on Graph Transformation (ICGT 2016) Graphs are used almost everywhere when representing or modelling structures and systems, not only in applied and theoretical computer science, but also in, e.g., natural and engineering sciences. Graph transformation and graph grammars are the fundamental modelling paradigms for describing, formalizing, and analyzing graphs that change over time when modelling, e.g., dynamic data structures, systems, or models.
Submitted by Anonymous on November 3rd, 2015
Event
CREST 2016
CREST: 1st Workshop on Causal-based Reasoning for Embedded and Safety-Critical Systems Technologies Satellite event of ETAPS 2016 Topic
Submitted by Anonymous on October 8th, 2015
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CPSS 2016
2nd ACM Cyber-Physical System Security Workshop (CPSS 2016) held in conjunction with ACM AsiaCCS'16
Submitted by Anonymous on October 2nd, 2015
Amy Karns Submitted by Amy Karns on September 18th, 2015
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ICCPS 2016
7th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems (ICCPS 2016) held as part of CPS Week 2016 to be held in Vienna, Austria, from 11 to 14 April 2016.
Submitted by Anonymous on September 18th, 2015
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CTS 2016
14th IFAC Symposium on Control in Transportation Systems (CTS 2016)  Considering your research in related areas, we kindly invite you to the 14th IFAC Symposium on Control in Transportation Systems (CTS 2016) that will take place in Istanbul, Turkey on 18-20 May, 2016. Considering its unique integration of historical, cultural and architectural masterpieces that reflect the meeting of Europe and Asia for many centuries, Istanbul, which is historically known as Byzantium and Constantinople, is specially chosen as the conference venue.
Submitted by Anonymous on September 18th, 2015
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