Models having two kinds of components that produce the same or similar results.
Event
NSV 2014
7th  International Workshop on Numerical Software Verification July 17-18, 2014 A Satellite Workshop of Vienna Summer of Logic 2014, Collocated with CAV 2014 Novelty of this edition
Submitted by Anonymous on March 26th, 2014
Event
SummerSim'14
2014 Summer Simulation Multi-Conference (SummerSim'14)           July 6 10, 2014 | |  The Hyatt Regency Monterey  | | Monterey, CA, USA
Submitted by Anonymous on February 4th, 2014
The 1st Workshop on Robotic Sensor Networks                     -  part of CPSWEEK -
Submitted by Anonymous on December 19th, 2013
Event
ICECCS 2014
The 19th IEEE International Conference on Engineering of Complex Computer Systems
Submitted by Anonymous on December 19th, 2013
Event
CyPhy'14
CyPhy'14 brings together researchers and practitioners working on modeling, simulation, and evaluation of CPS, based on a broad interpretation of these areas, to collect and exchange expertise from a diverse set of disciplines.
Submitted by Anonymous on December 19th, 2013
Event
MODPROD 2014
The Center for Model-based Product Development (MODPROD) is an inter-disciplinary research center at Linköping University. It revolves around model-based tools and methods for cyber-physical systems, mechanical systems, electronic systems and software, and unified approaches for model-based design. This workshop brings together expertise in these fields to discuss state of the art and the way ahead.
Submitted by Anonymous on October 15th, 2013
Big MDE A workshop of the STAF conferences, focusing on scalability in Model Driven Engineering. June 17, 2013, Budapest, Hungary.
Submitted by Anonymous on April 19th, 2013
An abstract describing one facet of our research.
Ivan Ruchkin Submitted by Ivan Ruchkin on October 11th, 2012
Symposia dedicated to promising research in resilient systems that will protect cyber-physical infrastructures from unexpected and malicious threats--securing our way of life.
Craig Rieger Submitted by Craig Rieger on September 18th, 2012
The objective of this research is to address fundamental challenges in the verification and analysis of reconfigurable distributed hybrid control systems. These occur frequently whenever control decisions for a continuous plant depend on the actions and state of other participants. They are not supported by verification technology today. The approach advocated here is to develop strictly compositional proof-based verification techniques to close this analytic gap in cyber-physical system design and to overcome scalability issues. This project develops techniques using symbolic invariants for differential equations to address the analytic gap between nonlinear applications and present verification techniques for linear dynamics. This project aims at transformative research changing the scope of systems that can be analyzed. The proposed research develops a compositional proof-based approach to hybrid systems verification in contrast to the dominant automata-based verification approaches. It represents a major improvement addressing the challenges of composition, reconfiguration, and nonlinearity in system models The proposed research has significant applications in the verification of safety-critical properties in next generation cyber-physical systems. This includes distributed car control, robotic swarms, and unmanned aerial vehicle cooperation schemes to full collision avoidance protocols for multiple aircraft. Analysis tools for distributed hybrid systems have a broad range of applications of varying degrees of safety-criticality, validation cost, and operative risk. Analytic techniques that find bugs or ensure correct functioning can save lives and money, and therefore are likely to have substantial economic and societal impact.
Off
Carnegie-Mellon University
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National Science Foundation
Platzer, Andre
Andre Platzer Submitted by Andre Platzer on April 7th, 2011
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