Electronics designed for use in aerospace vehicles.
The 2nd Mediterranean Conference on Embedded Computing (MECO 2013) is a continuation of very successful MECO-2012 event. It is an International Scientific Forum aimed to present and discuss the leading achievements in the modeling, analysis, design, validation and application of embedded computing systems. MECO 2013 will provide an opportunity for scientists, engineers and researchers to discuss new applications, design problems, ideas, solutions, research and development results, experiences and work-in-progress in this important technological area. 
Submitted by Anonymous on April 4th, 2013
The 25th EUROMICRO Con
Amy Karns Submitted by Amy Karns on April 4th, 2013
The 12th International Workshop on Real-Time Networks                      July 9th, 2013, Paris, France In conjunction with the 25th Euromicro Conference on Real-Time Systems (ECRTS)
Amy Karns Submitted by Amy Karns on April 4th, 2013
 
Submitted by Anonymous on February 12th, 2013
Effective engineering of complex devices often depends critically on the ability to encapsulate responsibility for tasks into modular agents and ensure those agents communicate with one another in well-defined and easily observable ways. When such conditions are followed, it becomes possible to detect where problems lie so they can be corrected. It also becomes possible to optimize the agents and their communications to improve performance. Cyber-physical systems (like robots, self-piloting aircraft, etc.) modify themselves to improve performance break those conditions in that some agent modules negotiate their own communications and decide their own actions, sometimes taking advantage of the physics of the world in ways we did not anticipate. This renders difficult application of standard engineering tools to accomplish critical fault diagnosis and design optimization. This project will produce analysis methods address the specific needs of cyber-physical systems that, by their natures, break the rules of convention. We will apply these new methods to the design and analysis of self-improving controllers for flapping-wing micro air vehicles. This work will provide advances in both model-checking related formal design methodologies and in module-based self-adaptive control in computationally resource constrained cyber-physical systems. The formal methods advances will significantly expand our ability to properly design and verify systems that tightly couple computation, sensors, and actuators. The specific test application addressed is significant to a number of nationally important security and defense efforts and will directly impact identified national priorities.
Off
Wright State University
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National Science Foundation
John Gallagher
John Gallagher Submitted by John Gallagher on December 11th, 2012
Event
ICESS'12
The 9th IEEE International Conference on Embedded Software and Systems (ICESS) 2012
Katie Dey Submitted by Katie Dey on April 16th, 2012
 
Katie Dey Submitted by Katie Dey on April 16th, 2012
NSF Industry Round-Table on Cyber-Physical Systems, May 17, 2007, Arlington, VA.
Submitted by Anonymous on April 16th, 2012
National Science Foundation
Air Force Office of Scientific Research
Submitted by Anonymous on August 30th, 2011
Air Force Office of Scientific Research
National Science Foundation
Janos Sztipanovits Submitted by Janos Sztipanovits on August 30th, 2011
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