CALL FOR WORKSHOP AND TUTORIAL PROPOSALS
Cyber-Physical Systems Week (CPS Week)
April 11-14, 2016 | Vienna, Austria | http://www.cpsweek.org/2016/
CPS Week is the premier event on Cyber-Physical Systems. It brings together four top conferences, HSCC, ICCPS, IPSN, and RTAS, 10-15 workshops, a localization competition, tutorials, and various exhibitions from both industry and academia. Altogether the CPS Week program covers a multitude of complementary aspects of CPS, and reunites the leading researchers in this dynamic field. CPS Week 2016 in Vienna, Austria, will host 10-15 workshops (subject to room availability) and 2-3 tutorials on Monday April 11 and is soliciting proposals for new and recurring workshops as well as for tutorials. CPS Week workshops are excellent opportunities to bring together researchers and practitioners from different communities to share their experiences in an interactive atmosphere and to foster collaboration for new and innovative projects. We invite you to submit workshop proposals on any topic related to the broad set of research, education, and application areas in cyber-physical systems.
Guidelines for workshop proposals:
Proposals should be submitted at the latest by *** October 1, 2015 ***
A workshop proposal consists of a 2-page maximum PDF file, including the following information:
- A concise title of the workshop
- Description of the topics and specific issues that the workshop will address, how the workshop complements CPS Week conferences and why the workshop theme is relevant
- Expected format of the workshop (regular paper presentations, poster presentations, invited talks, panel discussions, demo sessions, or other ideas to promote active exchange of ideas)
- Organizers with short bio, affiliation, and their expertise in the proposed topic(s)
- In case the workshop has been previously held, provide information to show that the previous edition(s) were successful in terms of paper submissions and/or attendance. Links to past workshop editions would be very helpful too.
- Length of the workshop (half-day/one-day) and the expected number of participants
- Follow-up plans (if any) to disseminate the ideas from the workshop, for example through proceedings or journal special issue
Please submit your workshop proposal by email to the workshop and tutorial chairsChristoph Kirsch (ck@cs.uni-salzburg.at) and Ana Sokolova (anas@cs.uni-salzburg.at). Please write “[CPSWeek 2016] Workshop Proposal" in the e-mail subject line.
Guidelines for tutorial proposals:
Proposals should be submitted at the latest by *** October 1, 2015 ***
A proposal consists of a 2-page maximum PDF file, including the following information on the tutorial program:
- The title and abstract of the tutorial
- An outline of tutorial content and objectives
- Prerequisite knowledge
- Organizers/Speakers with short bio, affiliation, and their expertise in the proposed topic(s)
- In case the tutorial has been previously held, include information on the last tutorial of the same topic held within CPS Week or other conferences such as the year it was held and the number of attendees. A link to past tutorial would be very helpful too.
- We envision tutorials to last for 3 hours.
Please submit your tutorial proposal by email to the workshop and tutorial chairs, Christoph Kirsch (ck@cs.uni-salzburg.at) and Ana Sokolova (anas@cs.uni-salzburg.at). Please write “[CPSWeek 2016] Tutorial Proposal" in the e-mail subject line.
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Notification of acceptance *** October 15, 2015 ***
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Call For Papers
CPS Security & Privacy 2016 : Call for Book Chapter Proposals for Security and Privacy in Cyber-Physical Systems: Foundations and Applications (Wiley)
Submission Deadline Aug 31, 2015
Notification Due Sep 15, 2015
Final Version Due Nov 30, 2015
Dear Colleague,
We would like to cordially invite you to contribute a book chapter to a forthcoming book entitled "Security and Privacy in Cyber-Physical Systems: Foundations and Applications" which will be published by Wiley.
Call for Chapters
Chapter Proposal Submission by August 31, 2015.
Submission Procedure:
Please email your abstract (max. 500 words) by August 31, 2015 to cps.wiley@gmail.com and indicate the specific chapter where your work best fits or propose your own topic relevant to the theme of the book.
Please provide the following points in your proposals/abstracts:
1. Title of the contribution,
2. Title of the chapter (of the tentative TOC) if the contribution refers to one of them,
3. Name of author, co-authors, institution, email-address,
4. Content/mission of the proposed article.
Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by the given deadline about the status of their proposals and sent chapter guidelines.
The topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Part I: Foundations and Principles
Chapter 1. Cybersecurity and Privacy: Past, Present and Future
Chapter 2. The interplay of Cyber, Physical, and Human elements in CPS
Chapter 3. Adaptive attack mitigation for CPS
Chapter 4. Authentication and access control for CPS
Chapter 5. Availability, recovery and auditing for CPS
Chapter 6. Data security and privacy for CPS
Chapter 7. Intrusion detection for CPS
Chapter 8. Key management in CPS
Chapter 9. Legacy CPS system protection
Chapter 10. Lightweight crypto and security
Chapter 11. Threat modeling for CPS
Chapter 12. Vulnerability analysis for CPS
Part II: Application Domains
Chapter 13. Energy
Chapter 14. Medical
Chapter 15. Transportation
Chapter 16. Physical Infrastructure
Chapter 17. Manufacturing
Chapter 18. Building
Chapter 19. Agriculture
Chapter 20. Robotics
Chapter 21. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
Chapter 22. Smart Cities
Editors:
- Houbing Song, West Virginia University, USA (Houbing.Song@mail.wvu.edu)
- Glenn A. Fink, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA (Glenn.Fink@pnnl.gov)
- Sabina Jeschke, RWTH Aachen University, Germany (sabina.jeschke@ima-zlw-ifu.rwth-aachen.de)
- Gilad L. Rosner, Internet of Things Privacy Forum, UK (gilad@giladrosner.com)
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2015/nsf15575/nsf15575.htm
Program Title: Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace (SaTC)
Synopsis of Program:
Cyberspace has transformed the daily lives of people for the better. The rush to adopt cyberspace, however, has exposed its fragility and vulnerabilities: corporations, agencies, national infrastructure and individuals have been victims of cyber-attacks. In December 2011, the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) with the cooperation of NSF issued a broad, coordinated Federal strategic plan for cybersecurity research and development to "change the game," minimize the misuses of cyber technology, bolster education and training in cybersecurity, establish a science of cybersecurity, and transition promising cybersecurity research into practice. This challenge requires a dedicated approach to research, development, and education that leverages the disciplines of mathematics and statistics, the social sciences, and engineering together with the computing, communications and information sciences.
The Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace (SaTC) program welcomes proposals that address cybersecurity from:
- a Trustworthy Computing Systems (TWC) perspective and/or a Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE) perspective;
- the Secure, Trustworthy, Assured and Resilient Semiconductors and Systems (STARSS) perspective; or
- the Transition to Practice (TTP) perspective.
In addition, we welcome proposals that integrate research addressing all of these perspectives (see the Program Description below). Proposals may be submitted in one of the following three project classes (plus Cybersecurity Education; see below):
- Small projects: up to $500,000 in total budget, with durations of up to three years;
- Medium projects: $500,001 to $1,200,000 in total budget, with durations of up to four years; or
- Large projects: $1,200,001 to $3,000,000 in total budget, with durations of up to five years.
![Amy Karns](/sites/cps-vo.org/files/pictures/2023-11/amy.jpeg)