------------------------------------------------------------------- CALL FOR PAPERS SNR 2018 ======== 4th International Workshop on Symbolic and Numerical Methods for Reachability Analysis April 14, 2018, Thessaloniki, Greece Affiliated with ETAPS 2018 http://snr2018.verivital.com/ Important Dates =============== Abstract submission: No longer required Paper submission: February 9, 2018 Notification: March 9, 2018 Final version: April 1, 2018 Workshop date: April 20, 2018 Scope ===== Cyber-physical systems are complex dynamical systems that combine discrete and continuous components and therefore feature hybrid discrete-continuous state. Reachability questions, regarding whether a system can run into a certain subset of its state space, stand at the core of verification and synthesis problems for hybrid systems and their embedded control software. Many successful reachability analysis methods for hybrid systems connect techniques from two major research areas: - Symbolic methods that encode reachability properties as logical formulas, resorting to constraint solvers, model checking algorithms, and theorem provers for discharging proof obligations over the resulting predicative representations of systems and state sets. - Numerical methods that operate on various forms of numerical approximations of reachable state sets and system dynamics, like verified integration. The SNR workshop is a platform for seeking further synergies between these two types of techniques already interacting closely in the existing approaches for reachability analysis. The workshop aims to catalyze work on the interface of symbolic and numerical methods for reachability analysis, automated system verification, correct-by-construction system synthesis, and planning in hybrid-state dynamical systems. It solicits submissions broadly in the area of analysis and synthesis of continuous and hybrid systems. The scope of the workshop includes, but is not restricted to, the following topics: - Verification of hybrid systems - Flow-pipe construction; symbolic representation of regions in reachability analysis algorithms - Abstraction techniques for hybrid systems and numerical programs - Trajectory generation from symbolic paths; counterexample computation - Symbolic and reliable integration - Bounded model-checking, symbolic simulation, and related techniques - Decision procedures over real numbers; logics to reason about hybrid systems - Automated deduction and invariant generation for hybrid systems - Reachability analysis for planning and synthesis - Stochastic/probabilistic hybrid systems - Domain-specific approaches in biology, robotics, cyber-physical systems (CPS), embedded software, etc. Submission Information ====================== The workshop solicits - long research papers (not exceeding 15 pages excluding references), - short research papers (not exceeding 6 pages excluding references) - tool papers (not exceeding 6 pages excluding references) - work-in-progress papers (not exceeding 6 pages excluding references). Research papers must present original unpublished work which is not submitted elsewhere. In order to foster the exchange of ideas, we also encourage work-in-progress papers, which present recent or on-going work. The papers should be written in English and formatted according to the EPTCS guidelines (http://style.eptcs.org/). Papers can be submitted using the EasyChair system: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=snr2018 All submissions will undergo a peer-reviewing process. Accepted research papers will be presented at the workshop and published in the Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science (EPTCS, http://www.eptcs.org/). Accepted work-in-progress papers will be presented at the workshop but will not be included in the proceedings. Invited Speakers ================ TBA Workshop Co-Chairs ================== Taylor T. Johnson (Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA) Martin Franzle (Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Germany) Publicity Chair =============== TBA Program Committee ================= TBA Erika Abraham (RWTH Aachen, Germany) Matthias Althoff (TUM, Germany) Ezio Bartocci (TU Vienna, Austria) Stanley Bak (Air Force Research Laboratory, OH, USA) Sergiy Bogomolov (Australian National University, Australia) Jyotirmoy V. Deshmukh (University of Southern California, CA, USA) Parasara Sridhar Duggirala (University of Connecticut, CT, USA) Sicun Gao (University of California San Diego, CA, USA) Martin Fränzle (University of Oldenburg, Germany) Goran Frehse (Verimag, France) Ian Mitchell (University of British Columbia, Canada) Sayan Mitra (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA) Nikolaj Nikitchenko (Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University, Ukraine) Jens Oehlerking (Robert Bosch GmbH, Germany) Corina Pasareanu (NASA Ames Research Center, CA, USA) Andre Platzer (Carnegie Melon University, PA, USA) Pavithra Prabhakar (Kansas State University, KS, USA) Rajarshi Ray (National Institute of Technology Meghalaya, India) Stefan Ratschan (Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic) Ashish Tiwari (SRI, CA, USA) Stavros Tripakis (Aalto University, Finland) Naijun Zhan (Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, PRC) Paolo Zuliani (University of Newcastle, UK) ------------------------------------------------------------------------