Several computations executing simultaneously, and potentially interacting with each other.
Event
TASE 2016
The 10th Theoretical Aspects of Software Engineering Conference (TASE 2016) TASE is an international symposium that aims to bring together researchers and developers from academia and industry with interest in the theoretical aspects of software engineering. Modern society is increasingly dependent on software systems that are becoming larger and more complex. This poses new challenges to current software engineering methodologies that need to be enhanced using modern results from theoretical computer science.
Submitted by Anonymous on October 19th, 2015
Event
IPDPS 2016
30th IEEE International Parallel & Distributed Processing Symposium PDPS is an international forum for engineers and scientists from around the world to present their latest research findings in all aspects of parallel computation. In addition to technical sessions of submitted paper presentations, the meeting offers workshops, tutorials, and commercial presentations & exhibits.
Submitted by Anonymous on October 8th, 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
Event
HiRES 2016
Call for Papers 4th Workshop on High-performance and Real-Time Embedded Systems (HiRES 2016) To be held in conjunction with the 11th International Conference on High-Performance and Embedded Architectures and Compilers (HiPEAC 2016) Goal of the Workshop
Submitted by Anonymous on October 8th, 2015
The 3rd International Workshop on Computational Antifragility and Antifragile Engineering (ANTIFRAGILE'16) in the framework of the 7th International Conference on Ambient Systems, Networks and Technologies (ANT-2016) Universidad Politécnica de Madrid Important Dates
Submitted by Anonymous on October 8th, 2015
Symposium on Theory of Modeling and Simulation ’16 part of the 2016 Spring Simulation Multi-Conference
Submitted by Anonymous on October 2nd, 2015
Event
WFCS 2016
12th IEEE World conference on Factory Communication Systems (WFCS 2016) COMMUNICATION in AUTOMATION  Scope: WFCS is the largest IEEE technical event specially dedicated to industrial communication systems. The aim of this conference is to provide a forum for researchers, practitioners and developers to review current trends in this area and to present and discuss new ideas and new research directions. Focus on:
Submitted by Anonymous on September 18th, 2015
Amy Karns Submitted by Amy Karns on September 18th, 2015
Event
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
The objective of this research is to prove that cyber-physical systems are safe before they are deployed. The approaches the research investigates are extensions of approaches used to test communications protocols. The problems with cyber-physical systems are that 1) they are much more complicated than communications protocols, 2) time is a more critical component of these systems, and 3) in a competitive environment there are likely to be many implementations that must interoperate. The complexity of communications protocols is reduced by using a layered architecture. Each layer provides a well defined service to the next layer. This research is developing multi-dimensional architectures that reflect the different ways that the cyber-physical system interacts with the physical world. The techniques are evaluated on a driver-assisted merge protocol. An architecture for the merge protocol has four dimensions organized as stacks for communications, external sensors, vehicle monitoring and control, and timing. This architecture will also be useful during standardization. Timing increases verification complexity by increasing the number of potential execution paths. The research conducted in this project explores how to reduce the number of paths by synchronizing clocks and using simultaneous operations. This approach is reasonable because of the timing accuracy now available with GPS. A two step verification process is used that creates an unambiguous model of the cyber-physical system, first proving that the model is safe, then checking that each implementation conforms to the model. This reduces the number and cost of tests for a three-party merge protocol. Specifically, assuming there are N implementation versions for different manufacturers and models, this approach reduces the number of necessary interaction tests, which would be cubic in N, to a single model verification and N conformance tests.
Off
Columbia University
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National Science Foundation
Nicholas Maxemchuk
Nicholas Maxemchuk Submitted by Nicholas Maxemchuk on August 27th, 2015
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