RTAS 2012 - The 18th IEEE Real-Time and Embedded Technology and Applications Symposium (RTAS 2012)
Topics/Call fo Papers
RTAS'12, the eighteenth in a series of annual conferences sponsored by IEEE, will be held in Beijing, China, as part of the Cyber-Physical Systems Week (CPS Week) during April 16-19 2012. CPS Week 2012 will bring together four leading conferences, the International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks (IPSN'12), the International Conference on Hybrid Systems (HSCC'12), the International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems (ICCPS'12), and RTAS'12.
RTAS 2012 invites papers describing original systems and applications, case studies, methodologies and applied algorithms that contribute to the state of practice in the broad field of embedded and open real-time systems and computing. The scope of RTAS 2012 will consist of four tracks: Applications, Systems, RTOSs and Tools, Applied Methodologies and Foundations, Hardware/Software Integration and Co-design, and Wireless Sensor Networks.
Track 1: Applications, Systems, RTOSs, and Tools. Papers submitted to this track are aimed at presenting specific systems and implementations. They must introduce the application context and clearly define motivating application examples. Authors must introduce the related research challenges, illustrate the theoretical foundations of the methodology adopted in the considered application/tool/RTOS, convincingly show applicability. Papers in this session must include a section on experimental results with a real implementation of the proposed system or applicability to an industrial case study or working system. The experiment/use case discussion must highlight problems/bottlenecks encountered in the implementation and show the measurements/evaluations on the prototype. Simulation-based results are acceptable when the authors motivate the impossibility of an actual system development.
Track 2: Applied Methodologies and Foundations. Papers submitted to this track are aimed at basic methodologies and algorithms that are applicable to real systems to solve specific problems. Authors must introduce the application context and clearly define motivating application examples. The system models and any assumptions used in the derivation of the results must be applicable to real systems and reflect actual needs. Papers must also include a section on experimental results, preferably on real case studies or models of real systems, although the use of synthetic workloads and models is acceptable if motivated. Papers failing to address applicability as defined in the previous guidelines are not considered as acceptable.
Track 3: Wireless Sensor Networks. This track is open to submissions addressing applicative aspects of sensor networks, including applications on environment monitoring, emergency response, critical infrastructure protection, medical care, intelligent transportation, and smart manufacturing. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): sensor network applications and deployment experiences; operating systems and middleware for sensor networks; real-time operation issues in sensor networks; distributed networked sensing; actuation and control; power and energy management/harvesting; wide-area sensing services; detection, classification, and estimation; localization and time synchronization; security and privacy.
Track 4: Hardware-Software Co-design. This track focuses on design methodologies and tools for hardware/software integration and co-design of modern embedded systems for real-time applications. General topics relevant to this track include, but are not limited to, architecture description languages and tools, WCET analysis, software architectures, design space exploration, synthesis and optimization. Of special interest are SoC design for real-time applications, special purpose functional units, specialized memory structures, multi-core chips and communication aspects, FPGA simulation and prototyping, software simulation and compilation for novel architectures and applications, as well as power, timing and predictability analyses.
Conference Committee:
General Chairs:
Hakan Aydin, George Mason University, USA
Yunhao Liu, Tsinghua University, China
Program Chair:
Marco Di Natale, Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy
Track Chairs:
Rich West, Boston University, USA (Applications, Systems, RTOS and Tools)
Marco Di Natale, Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy (Applied Methodologies and Foundations)
Jian-Jia Chen, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany (Hardware/Software Integration and Co-design)
Rahul Mangharam, Univ. of Pennsylvania, USA (Wireless Sensor Networks)
Ex-Officio: Giorgio Buttazzo (IEEE TC-RTS Chair), Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy
RTAS 2012 invites papers describing original systems and applications, case studies, methodologies and applied algorithms that contribute to the state of practice in the broad field of embedded and open real-time systems and computing. The scope of RTAS 2012 will consist of four tracks: Applications, Systems, RTOSs and Tools, Applied Methodologies and Foundations, Hardware/Software Integration and Co-design, and Wireless Sensor Networks.
Track 1: Applications, Systems, RTOSs, and Tools. Papers submitted to this track are aimed at presenting specific systems and implementations. They must introduce the application context and clearly define motivating application examples. Authors must introduce the related research challenges, illustrate the theoretical foundations of the methodology adopted in the considered application/tool/RTOS, convincingly show applicability. Papers in this session must include a section on experimental results with a real implementation of the proposed system or applicability to an industrial case study or working system. The experiment/use case discussion must highlight problems/bottlenecks encountered in the implementation and show the measurements/evaluations on the prototype. Simulation-based results are acceptable when the authors motivate the impossibility of an actual system development.
Track 2: Applied Methodologies and Foundations. Papers submitted to this track are aimed at basic methodologies and algorithms that are applicable to real systems to solve specific problems. Authors must introduce the application context and clearly define motivating application examples. The system models and any assumptions used in the derivation of the results must be applicable to real systems and reflect actual needs. Papers must also include a section on experimental results, preferably on real case studies or models of real systems, although the use of synthetic workloads and models is acceptable if motivated. Papers failing to address applicability as defined in the previous guidelines are not considered as acceptable.
Track 3: Wireless Sensor Networks. This track is open to submissions addressing applicative aspects of sensor networks, including applications on environment monitoring, emergency response, critical infrastructure protection, medical care, intelligent transportation, and smart manufacturing. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): sensor network applications and deployment experiences; operating systems and middleware for sensor networks; real-time operation issues in sensor networks; distributed networked sensing; actuation and control; power and energy management/harvesting; wide-area sensing services; detection, classification, and estimation; localization and time synchronization; security and privacy.
Track 4: Hardware-Software Co-design. This track focuses on design methodologies and tools for hardware/software integration and co-design of modern embedded systems for real-time applications. General topics relevant to this track include, but are not limited to, architecture description languages and tools, WCET analysis, software architectures, design space exploration, synthesis and optimization. Of special interest are SoC design for real-time applications, special purpose functional units, specialized memory structures, multi-core chips and communication aspects, FPGA simulation and prototyping, software simulation and compilation for novel architectures and applications, as well as power, timing and predictability analyses.
Conference Committee:
General Chairs:
Hakan Aydin, George Mason University, USA
Yunhao Liu, Tsinghua University, China
Program Chair:
Marco Di Natale, Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy
Track Chairs:
Rich West, Boston University, USA (Applications, Systems, RTOS and Tools)
Marco Di Natale, Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy (Applied Methodologies and Foundations)
Jian-Jia Chen, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany (Hardware/Software Integration and Co-design)
Rahul Mangharam, Univ. of Pennsylvania, USA (Wireless Sensor Networks)
Ex-Officio: Giorgio Buttazzo (IEEE TC-RTS Chair), Scuola Superiore S. Anna, Italy
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Last modified: 2011-11-08 17:22:16