Cyber-Physical System Design from an Architecture Analysis Viewpoint
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Yamine Ait Ameur is a professor at Toulouse National Polytechnique Institute and a member of the TCNRS IRIT Research Institute in Computer Science. His research topics concern 1) Formal methods for validation and verification, 2) Ontology-based modelling and domain knowledge explicitation, and 3) Application domains: embedded systems, interactive systems, semantic web, cyber-physical systems, and related topics. Two main important aspects characterize his research activities. On the one hand the fundamental aspects are studied through the use of formal modelling techniques based on refinement and proof (in particular, using Event-B), explicit formalisation of semantics employing formal ontology models. On the other hand, practical aspects are addressed through the development of operational applications, allowing validation of the proposed approaches. Embedded systems in avionics and railway systems, engineering, interactive systems, CO2 capture, and cyber physical systems are some of the application domains targeted by his work. He is the author of several research papers published in international journals and in the proceedings of international conferences. He is one of the main editors of the ISO 13584 International Standard Series, commonly known as PLib (Parts Libraries) for ontologies in system engineering.
Shin Nakajima is a professor at the National Institute of Informatics, Tokyo; an adjunct professor at the Graduate University for Advanced Studies; and a visiting professor at the Open University of Japan. His research topics concern formal methods, automated verification, assuring the quality of deep neural networks software, cyber-physical systems, and software-enabled innovation management. He has authored six books on those subjects.
Dominique Méry has been a full professor of computing science at the University of Lorraine since 1993 and is teaching in the School of Engineering in Information Technology TELECOM Nancy. He is leading the research group MOSEL on formal methods and applications in LORIA, jointly with CNRS, INRIA, and the University of Lorraine. He has been a junior member of the Institut Universitaire de France IUF (1995–2000) and is a member of the IFIP WG 1.3 on foundations of specifications. His current scientific activities a focus on proof-based development of distributed algorithms using the refinement, as well as modelling, of cyber physical systems as medical devices. His research uses mainly the modelling language B/Event-B and related platforms. He has led the IMPEX ANR project dealing with the integration of the explicit semantics in the proof-based development of software systems. Finally, his research explores the extension of the scope of discrete modelling techniques to handle the design and modelling of hybrid systems.