[FM-India] NFM 2016 - second call for papers

Madhavan Mukund madhavan at cmi.ac.in
Tue Jan 5 23:04:09 IST 2016


 Date: Tue, 5 Jan 2016 17:28:40 +0000
 From: "Havelund, Klaus (349F)" <Klaus.Havelund at jpl.nasa.gov>
 To: "fm-announcements at lists.nasa.gov" <fm-announcements at lists.nasa.gov>
 Subject: [fm-announcements] NFM 2016 - second call for papers

 NFM 2016 - Second Call For Papers

 THE 8TH NASA FORMAL METHODS SYMPOSIUM

 http://crisys.cs.umn.edu/nfm2016

 June 07 - June 09 2016

 McNamara Alumni Center   
 University of Minnesota   
 200 Oak Street S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455   


 THEME OF THE SYMPOSIUM 

 The widespread use and increasing complexity of mission-critical and 
 safety-critical systems at NASA and the aerospace industry requires advanced 
 techniques that address their specification, design, verification, validation, 
 and certification requirements. The NASA Formal Methods Symposium is a forum 
 to foster collaboration between theoreticians and practitioners from NASA, 
 academia, and the industry, with the goal of identifying challenges and 
 providing solutions towards achieving assurance for such critical systems. 

 New developments and emerging applications like autonomous on-board software 
 for Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), UAS Traffic Management (UTM), advanced 
 separation assurance algorithms for aircraft, and the need for system-wide 
 fault detection, diagnosis, and prognostics provide new challenges for system 
 specification, development, and verification approaches. Similar challenges 
 need to be addressed during development and deployment of on-board software 
 for spacecraft ranging from small and inexpensive CubeSat systems to manned 
 spacecraft like Orion, as well as for ground systems.

 The focus of the symposium will be on formal techniques and other approaches 
 for software assurance, their theory, current capabilities and limitations, 
 as well as their potential application to aerospace, robotics, and other 
 NASA-relevant safety-critical systems during all stages of the software 
 life-cycle. 


 TOPICS OF INTEREST INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO

 * Model checking
 * Theorem proving
 * SAT and SMT solving
 * Symbolic execution
 * Static analysis
 * Model-based development
 * Runtime verification
 * Software and system testing
 * Safety assurance
 * Fault tolerance
 * Compositional verification
 * Security and intrusion detection
 * Design for verification and correct-by-design techniques
 * Techniques for scaling formal methods
 * Applications of formal methods in the development of:
     * autonomous systems
     * safety-critical artificial intelligence systems
     * cyber-physical, embedded, and hybrid systems
     * fault-detection, diagnostics, and prognostics systems
 * Use of formal methods in:
     * assurance cases
     * human-machine interaction analysis
     * requirements generation, specification, and validation
     * automated testing and verification


 IMPORTANT DATES

 - Paper Submission:    2/19/2016
 - Paper Notifications: 4/8/2016
 - Camera-ready Papers: 4/27/2016
 - Symposium:           6/7 - 6/9/2016


 LOCATION

 The symposium will take place at McNamara Alumni Center, University of
 Minnesota.

 Registration is required but is free of charge.


 SUBMISSION DETAILS

 There are two categories of submissions:

 1. Regular papers describing fully developed work and complete
    results (maximum 15 pages)

 2. Short papers on tools, experience reports, or work in progress 
    with preliminary results (maximum 6 pages)

 All papers must be in English and describe original work that has not been 
 published or submitted elsewhere. All submissions will be fully reviewed by 
 at least three members of the Program Committee.

 Papers will appear in a volume of Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science 
 (LNCS), and must use LNCS style formatting. Papers must be submitted in PDF 
 format at the EasyChair submission site:

 https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=nfm2016

 Authors of selected best papers may be invited to submit an extended
 version to a special issue of the Journal of Automated Reasoning (Springer).


 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

 - Michael Lowry, NASA Ames Research Center, USA (NASA Liaison)
 - Johann Schumann, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA (General Chair)
 - Oksana Tkachuk, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA (PC Chair)
 - Sanjai Rayadurgam, University of Minnesota, USA (PC Chair)
 - Mike Whalen, University of Minnesota, USA (Financial Chair)
 - Mats Heimdahl, University of Minnesota, USA (Local Arrangements Chair)


 PROGRAM COMMITTEE

 - Julia Badger, NASA Johnson Space Center, USA
 - Clark Barrett, New York University, USA
 - Saddek Bensalem, Verimag and  University Joseph Fourier, France
 - Dirk Beyer, University of Passau, Germany
 - Borzoo Bonakdarpour, McMaster University, Canada
 - Alessandro Cimatti, FBK, Italy
 - Darren Cofer, Rockwell Collins, Inc., USA
 - Myra Cohen, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
 - Misty Davies, NASA Ames Research Center, USA
 - Leonardo de Moura, Microsoft, USA
 - Ben Di Vito, NASA Langley Research Center, USA
 - Alexandre Duret-Lutz, LRDE / EPITA, France
 - Andrew Gacek, Rockwell Collins, Inc., USA
 - Pierre-Loic Garoche, ONERA, France
 - Shalini Ghosh, SRI International, USA
 - Susanne Graf, Universite Joseph Fourier / CNRS / VERIMAG, France
 - Radu Grosu, Stony Brook University, USA
 - Arie Gurfinkel,SEI, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
 - Klaus Havelund, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Constance Heitmeyer, Naval Research Laboratory, USA
 - Gerard Holzmann, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Falk Howar, TU Clausthal / IPSSE, Germany
 - Rajeev Joshi, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Dejan Jovanovi?, SRI International, USA
 - Gerwin Klein, NICTA and University of New South Wales, Australia
 - Daniel Kroening, University of Oxford, UK
 - Rahul Kumar, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Célia Martinie, ICS-IRIT, Université Paul Sabatier, France
 - Eric Mercer, Brigham Young University, USA
 - Cesar Munoz, NASA Langley Research Center, USA
 - Jorge A Navas, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA
 - Natasha Neogi, NASA Langley Research Center, USA
 - Ganesh Pai, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA
 - Charles Pecheur, Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium
 - Lee Pike, Galois, Inc., USA
 - Andreas Podelski, University of Freiburg, Germany
 - Pavithra Prabhakar, Kansas State University, USA
 - Venkatesh Prasad Ranganath, Kansas State University, USA
 - Franco Raimondi, Middlesex University, UK
 - Kristin Yvonne Rozier, University of Cincinnati, USA
 - Neha Rungta, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA
 - Oleg Sokolsky, University of Pennsylvania, USA
 - Stefano Tonetta, FBK, Italy
 - Helmut Veith, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
 - Willem Visser, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
 - Virginie Wiels, ONERA / DTIM, France
 - Guowei Yang, Texas State University, USA


 STEERING COMMITTEE

 - Julia Badger, NASA Johnson Space Center, USA 
 - Ben Di Vito, NASA Langley Research Center, USA 
 - Klaus Havelund, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Gerard Holzmann, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
 - Michael Lowry, NASA Ames Research Center, USA
 - Kristin Yvonne Rozier, University of Cincinnati, USA
 - Johann Schumann, SGT, Inc./NASA Ames Research Center, USA


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