TETC 2013 - Special Issue on Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS)
Topics/Call fo Papers
IEEE Transactions on Emerging Topics in Computing (TETC) Special Issue on
Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS)
IEEE Transactions on Emerging Topics in Computing (TETC) is seeking original
manuscripts for Special Issue on Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS), scheduled to
be published in the January ? June 2013 issue. The coordination and tight
link between computational, virtual and physical resources will drive the
potential of having a pervasive effect in the citizens everyday life,
satisfying various needs and also creating new opportunities for the
introduction of services that will enhance the quality of life of the
society as a whole. Research advances in cyber-physical systems promise to
transform our world with systems that will far exceed those of today in
terms of: effectiveness, adaptability, autonomicity, energy efficiency,
precision, reliability, safety, usability, scalability, stability and
user-centric applicability. Moreover, recently the Sensor Web concept came
into foreground, aiming at combining distributed sensing with the ubiquitous
connectivity and accessibility of the web, therefore facilitating the close
interaction of digital world with physical world.
Cyber-physical systems find direct applicability in a wide range of areas
and disciplines, including for instance (but not limited to): a) Smart Grid
technologies: that aim at facilitating a reliable and efficient delivery of
electricity to consumers using digital communications and security
technologies, and intelligent monitoring and control of the delivery network
and electricity consumption b) Wireless sensing, monitoring and networking:
to enable distributed monitoring systems of numerous smart sensors and
actuators, mobile devices, RFIDs, (ground, aerial, aquatic) robots etc.,
which revolutionize a variety of application areas with unprecedented
density, fidelity, and scalability of environment instrumentation; c)
Vehicular cyber-physical and intelligent transportation systems: that
integrate computing, communication, and storage capabilities with monitoring
and control of vehicles in the physical world to deal with the grand
challenges of safe, green, and efficient transportation; d) Smart Living
technologies: smart city (e.g. increasing security, comfort and convenience,
green energy), intelligent park and space, healthcare systems. Ambient
intelligence, context-awareness, data mining, embedded system and software,
evolutionary computation, modeling environments and human behavior, social
networks, big data, security, privacy and trust, ubiquitous computing and
other technologies and methodologies applied in CPS are also welcome.
Towards merging the information-centric character and node-centric physical
world connectivity, well-defined analytical models, methodologies and
experimental validations are required of how to build such systems capable
of coping with the entire chain of operations and orchestrating the various
parts together in a flexible, efficient and economic way.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following:
- Architectural framework for distributed CPS
- Resource Management in large scale CPS
- Evaluations and field trials of CPS and solutions Security, privacy,
scalability, and reliability issues
- Design and cross-layer optimizations
- Vehicular CPS and intelligent transportation systems
- Scalable monitoring applications with sensors, actuators, smart
phones, robots, and other wireless mobile devices
- Smart Living and Smart grid technologies
- Modeling and fault tolerance
Submission Guideline
Submitted articles must not have been previously published or currently
submitted for journal publication elsewhere. As an author, you are
responsible for understanding and adhering to our submission guidelines. You
can access them by clicking on the following web link:
http://www.computer.org/mc/tpds/author.htm. Please thoroughly read these
before submitting your manuscript. Please submit your paper to Manuscript
Central at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tetc-cs.
Please note the following important dates:
- Manuscript Submission Deadline: March 18, 2013
- Notification of Initial Decision: April 26, 2013
- Minor Revisions due (if needed): May 17, 2013
- Notification of Final Decision: June 12, 2013
- Final Manuscripts Due: June 19, 2013
- Publication Date: September 2013
Co-guest Editors
- Song Guo, The University of Aizu (coordinator)
- Hannes Frey, University of Koblenz-Landau
- Nei Kato, Tohoku University
- Yunhao Liu, Tsinghua University
Publicity Co-Chairs
- Jaime Lloret, Polytechnic University of Valencia
- Jiming Chen, Zhejiang University
- Xu Li, Huawei Technologies Canada
Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS)
IEEE Transactions on Emerging Topics in Computing (TETC) is seeking original
manuscripts for Special Issue on Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS), scheduled to
be published in the January ? June 2013 issue. The coordination and tight
link between computational, virtual and physical resources will drive the
potential of having a pervasive effect in the citizens everyday life,
satisfying various needs and also creating new opportunities for the
introduction of services that will enhance the quality of life of the
society as a whole. Research advances in cyber-physical systems promise to
transform our world with systems that will far exceed those of today in
terms of: effectiveness, adaptability, autonomicity, energy efficiency,
precision, reliability, safety, usability, scalability, stability and
user-centric applicability. Moreover, recently the Sensor Web concept came
into foreground, aiming at combining distributed sensing with the ubiquitous
connectivity and accessibility of the web, therefore facilitating the close
interaction of digital world with physical world.
Cyber-physical systems find direct applicability in a wide range of areas
and disciplines, including for instance (but not limited to): a) Smart Grid
technologies: that aim at facilitating a reliable and efficient delivery of
electricity to consumers using digital communications and security
technologies, and intelligent monitoring and control of the delivery network
and electricity consumption b) Wireless sensing, monitoring and networking:
to enable distributed monitoring systems of numerous smart sensors and
actuators, mobile devices, RFIDs, (ground, aerial, aquatic) robots etc.,
which revolutionize a variety of application areas with unprecedented
density, fidelity, and scalability of environment instrumentation; c)
Vehicular cyber-physical and intelligent transportation systems: that
integrate computing, communication, and storage capabilities with monitoring
and control of vehicles in the physical world to deal with the grand
challenges of safe, green, and efficient transportation; d) Smart Living
technologies: smart city (e.g. increasing security, comfort and convenience,
green energy), intelligent park and space, healthcare systems. Ambient
intelligence, context-awareness, data mining, embedded system and software,
evolutionary computation, modeling environments and human behavior, social
networks, big data, security, privacy and trust, ubiquitous computing and
other technologies and methodologies applied in CPS are also welcome.
Towards merging the information-centric character and node-centric physical
world connectivity, well-defined analytical models, methodologies and
experimental validations are required of how to build such systems capable
of coping with the entire chain of operations and orchestrating the various
parts together in a flexible, efficient and economic way.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following:
- Architectural framework for distributed CPS
- Resource Management in large scale CPS
- Evaluations and field trials of CPS and solutions Security, privacy,
scalability, and reliability issues
- Design and cross-layer optimizations
- Vehicular CPS and intelligent transportation systems
- Scalable monitoring applications with sensors, actuators, smart
phones, robots, and other wireless mobile devices
- Smart Living and Smart grid technologies
- Modeling and fault tolerance
Submission Guideline
Submitted articles must not have been previously published or currently
submitted for journal publication elsewhere. As an author, you are
responsible for understanding and adhering to our submission guidelines. You
can access them by clicking on the following web link:
http://www.computer.org/mc/tpds/author.htm. Please thoroughly read these
before submitting your manuscript. Please submit your paper to Manuscript
Central at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tetc-cs.
Please note the following important dates:
- Manuscript Submission Deadline: March 18, 2013
- Notification of Initial Decision: April 26, 2013
- Minor Revisions due (if needed): May 17, 2013
- Notification of Final Decision: June 12, 2013
- Final Manuscripts Due: June 19, 2013
- Publication Date: September 2013
Co-guest Editors
- Song Guo, The University of Aizu (coordinator)
- Hannes Frey, University of Koblenz-Landau
- Nei Kato, Tohoku University
- Yunhao Liu, Tsinghua University
Publicity Co-Chairs
- Jaime Lloret, Polytechnic University of Valencia
- Jiming Chen, Zhejiang University
- Xu Li, Huawei Technologies Canada
Other CFPs
- 2013 International Conference on Green Building, Materials and Civil Engineering
- 2013 IEEE 7th International Power Engineering and Optimization Conference (PEOCO2013)
- 2013 International Conference on Internet Services Technology and Information Engineering (ISTIE 2013)
- 3rd Workshop on Fault-Tolerance for HPC at Extreme Scale
- Workshop on Optimization techniques for Resources Management in Clouds
Last modified: 2012-12-12 14:35:06