Applications of CPS technologies that involve communications systems.
The CPSWeek brings together five leading conferences - HSCC, ICCPS, IPSN, HiCoNS, RTAS - as well as several workshops and tutorials on various aspects on the research and development of cyber-physical systems: Embedded Systems, Hybrid Systems, Real-Time and Sensor Networks.
Submitted by Anonymous on September 5th, 2013
Kamesh Namuduri Submitted by Kamesh Namuduri on July 27th, 2020
Event
FNC 2020
17th International Conference on Future Networks and Communications (FNC 2020) Research in networks and communication technologies requires very significant investments of stakeholders for enabling our future networking society. Research in network communication has made several possible innovations having a strong influence on people's lives. Mobile communications and the Internet are two outstanding examples.
Submitted by Anonymous on July 22nd, 2020
Kamesh Namuduri Submitted by Kamesh Namuduri on June 12th, 2019
Log
Mohamed Ali Bubtaina Submitted by Mohamed Ali Bubtaina on June 26th, 2018
Event
RESACS 2018
4th International Workshop on Requirements Engineering for Self-Adaptive and Cyber-Physical Systems (RESACS 2018) http://resacs2018.wordpress.com | http://twitter.com/RESACS_WS
Submitted by Bastian Tenbergen on March 27th, 2018
The age of autonomous mobile systems is dawning -- from autonomous cars to household robots to aerial drones -- and they are expected to transform multiple industries and have significant impact on the US economy. Through wireless coordination, these systems create a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. For example, vehicle "platoons" increase both highway throughput and fuel efficiency by traveling nearly bumper-to-bumper, using a wireless coupling to brake and accelerate simultaneously. Similarly, vehicles or drones can speed around blind corners using the sensing capabilities of the agents ahead of them. However, wireless communication is still considered too unreliable for safety-critical operations like these. This research is creating new techniques for safe wirelessly coordinated mobility, which is becoming increasingly important with the proliferation of autonomous mobile systems. The approach is to develop a framework for joint modeling and analysis of motion and communication in order to find provably safe coordination paths. This includes new models that can predict the effect of motion paths on the wireless channel, together with new formal methods that can use these models in a tractable manner to synthesize control strategies with provable guarantees. The key innovations include new methods to assess the validity of a Radio Frequency model, new methods for tractable probabilistic reasoning over complex models of the wireless channel and protocols, and new control strategies that achieve provable safety guarantees for states that would have been unsafe without wireless coordination. If successful, this research will allow mobile systems to realize the performance benefits of wireless coordination while preserving the ability to provide provable safety guarantees. The focus is not on improving the wireless channel reliability; instead, the aim is to provide safety guarantees on the entire mobile system by modeling and analyzing the channel's dynamic properties in a rapidly changing environment.
Off
University of Virginia
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National Science Foundation
Cody Fleming
Submitted by Cameron Whitehouse on October 2nd, 2017
Submitted by Robert Zager on August 29th, 2017
Submitted by Robert Zager on May 23rd, 2017
Submitted by Robert Zager on May 22nd, 2017
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