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HiCoNS 2014 : 3rd ACM International Conference on High Confidence Networked Systems | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.hi-cons.org | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
HiCoNS 2014
3rd ACM International Conference on High Confidence Networked Systems April 15-17, 2014 Berlin, Germany URL: http://www.hi-cons.org/ Important dates: Submission deadline: October 14, 2013. Author notification: December 17, 2013. Camera-ready submission: February 3, 2014 Conference dates: April 15-17, 2014 HiCoNS 2014 will be part of the 7th CPSWeek (Cyber-Physical Systems Week) collocating 5 conferences: HSCC, the Real-Time and Embedded Technology and Applications Symposium (RTAS), the International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks (IPSN), the Conference on High Confidence Networked Systems (HiCoNS) and the International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems (ICCPS). Conference Scope: HiCoNS aims to bring together novel concepts and theories that will help in the development of the science of high confidence networked systems, in particular those considered cyber-physical systems (CPS) and their interactions with human decision makers. The conference will focus on system theoretic approaches to address fundamental challenges to increase the confidence of networked CPS by making them more secure, dependable, and trustworthy. An emphasis will be the control and incentive challenges arising as a result of complex interdependencies between networked systems, in particular those at the intersection of cyber and physical dynamics. In doing so, the conference will advance the development of a principled approach to high-confidence networked CPS. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: - Threat assessment of networked systems - Detectability and diagnosis of faults and attacks - Intrusion and anomaly detection systems - Robust and resilient network control - Security economics - Game theoretic approaches for security of networked systems - Mechanism design and incentives for resilience - Management of interdependent risks - Security and privacy of networks - Adversarial machine learning - Security of sensor-actuator networks - Design architectures for prevention, detection, and response - Cyber awareness of human-centric systems - Response and reconfiguration methods - Test-beds for security of critical infrastructures - Model based design for integration of security and control Approaches that can be applied to particular critical infrastructure systems in Transportation (surface and aviation), Energy (smart grid and building energy management), Water and gas distribution, and Healthcare (medical systems and associated embedded devices) are particularly welcomed but other areas will be explored. Equally welcomed is foundational work that cuts across multiple application areas or advances the scientific understanding of underlying principles for the development of high confidence (secure, reliable, robust, and trustworthy) networked cyber-physical systems. The conference aims at engaging researchers from multiple disciplines, control theory, computer security, network security, information economics, game theory, and and theory of incentives, and linking work being done in the applied areas with foundational work to advance a science base for high-confidence networked systems in order to provide the means of building such systems in a principled way. Submission Guidelines: Conference submissions should consist of original research papers up to ten (10) pages in length. Papers should follow the two-column ACM Proceedings Format. Please refer to the ACM SIG Proceedings Template page for paper templates in both Microsoft Word and LaTeX formats: http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates Papers should be submitted electronically (in PDF or MS Word format) online via the Conference Submission Site: https://www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?timeout=1;conf=hicons2014 Steering Committee: Shankar Sastry, University of California, Berkeley, USA Tamer Basar, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA General Chairs: Linda Bushnell, University of Washington, USA Larry Rohrbough, University of California, Berkeley, USA Program Chairs: Saurabh Amin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Xenofon Koutsoukos, Vanderbilt University, USA Publications Chair: Shreyas Sundaram, University of Waterloo, Canada Publicity Chair: Mark Yampolskiy, Vanderbilt University, USA Posters/Demonstrations Chair: Peter Horvath, Vanderbilt University, USA Program Committee: Anuradha Annaswamy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Hamsa Balakrishnan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Alvaro Cárdenas, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Dieter Gollmann, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Sandra Hirche, Technische Universität München, Germany Himanshu Khurana, Honeywell Automation and Control Solutions, USA Deepa Kundur, University of Toronto, Canada Cedric Langbort, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Jerome Le Ny, Polytechnique Montréal, Canada Heath Leblanc, Ohio Northern University, USA Michael Lemmon, University of Notre Dame, USA Rahul Mangharam, University of Pennsylvania, USA Sayan Mitra, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Miroslav Pajic, University of Pennsylvania, USA Radha Poovendran, University of Washington, USA Henrik Sandberg, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Sweden Galina Schwartz, University of California, Berkeley, USA Bruno Sinopoli, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Ashish Tiwari, SRI International, USA Yevgeniy Vorobeychik, Vanderbilt University, USA Yuan Xue, Vanderbilt University, USA David K.Y. Yau, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore |
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