posted by user: smarx || 3164 views || tracked by 4 users: [display]

ICCPS 2018 : International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle


Conference Series : International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems
 
Link: http://iccps.acm.org/2018/?q=Dates
 
When Apr 11, 2018 - Apr 13, 2018
Where Porto
Submission Deadline Oct 6, 2017
Notification Due Dec 18, 2017
Final Version Due Feb 1, 2018
 

Call For Papers

Overview: As digital computing and communication become faster, cheaper, and available in packages that are smaller and use less power, these capabilities are increasingly embedded in many objects and structures in the physical environment. Cyber-physical systems (CPS) are physical and engineered systems whose operations are monitored, coordinated, controlled, and integrated by computing and communication. Broad CPS deployment is transforming how we interact with the physical world as profoundly as the world wide web transformed how we interact with one another, and further harnessing their capabilities holds the possibility of enormous societal and economic impact. ACM/IEEE ICCPS is the premier single-track conference for reporting advances in all CPS aspects, including theory, tools, applications, systems, test-beds and field deployments.

ICCPS 2018 will, for the first time, have two tracks: Theory and Applications. Authors will be required to select a track (see description below) when submitting papers. Please note that the program co-chairs may move a paper to a more appropriate track based on their judgment and suggestions from the program committee. Each track will have its own program committee. The theory track focuses on the core science to develop fundamental principles that underpin the integration of cyber and physical elements. The applications track focuses on the development of technologies, tools, and architectures for building CPS systems, and on the design, implementation, and investigation of CPS applications. Application domains for both tracks include (but are not limited to): transportation, energy, water, agriculture, ecology, supply-chains, medical and assistive technology, sensor and social networks, and robotics. Among the relevant research areas are security, control, optimization, machine learning, game theory, mechanism design, mobile and cloud computing, model-based design, verification, data mining / analytics, signal processing, and human-in-the-loop shared or supervisory control. Papers on secure and resilient CPS infrastructure (the focus of the former HiCoNS conference) can either be submitted to the theory or to the applications track depending on the emphasis of the paper.

Submissions: All submissions must be in English. Only original papers that are not submitted or published in other conferences or journals will be considered. Manuscripts should have a main body with no more than 10 pages. Up to 2 additional pages of appendices may follow the main body of the paper, within the same submitted .pdf file. The paper must be in the same format as that in the final published proceedings. It shall use the IEEE two-column conference style, US Letter (8.5 inch x 11 inch) paper size, and 10pt text font size.

Related Resources

ISDE 2025   Intelligent Systems for Digital Era (ISDE) track at 40th ACM/SIGAPP SAC
IoT4safety 2024   1st International Workshop on Internet of Things for Safety-Critical Cyber Physical Systems
IEEE CPS-Sec 2024   The 9th IEEE International Workshop on Cyber-Physical Systems Security
17th IEEE MCSoC 2024   17th IEEE International Symposium on Embedded Multicore/Many-core Systems-on-Chip (MCSoC-2024)
ICCSI 2024   The 2024 International Conference on Cyber-physical Social Intelligence
TCRS 2024   Time-Centric Reactive Software
Security 2025   Special Issue on Recent Advances in Security, Privacy, and Trust
ACM SAC 2025   40th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium On Applied Computing
Hong Kong-MIST 2025   2025 Asia-Pacific Conference on Marine Intelligent Systems and Technologies (MIST 2025)
BS LAB 2025   9th Business Systems Laboratory International Symposium TECHNOLOGY AND SOCIETY: Boon or Bane?