15 July 2010
Edinburgh, Scotland
---------------------------------------------------------------------- First call for papers LfSA'10 - Logics for System Analysis Workshop Affiliated with IJCAR and LICS at FLoC 2010 July 15th, 2010, Edinburgh, UK http://www.ls.cs.cmu.edu/LfSA10/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Safety-critical systems frequently occur as real-time systems, embedded systems, hybrid systems, distributed systems, and cyber-physical systems. They are also becoming more and more important in many application domains, including aviation, automotive, railway, robotic, or medical applications. To ensure the correct functioning of safety-critical systems it is necessary to model and reason about hardware (including physical properties or movement), software, communication aspects, and qualitative and quantitative aspects of the system environment. Logics for system analysis, system modeling, and specification, are primary tools to analyze system behavior. Logic is equally important for understanding the theoretical foundations of system analysis and as the basis for practical analysis tools that establish correct functioning of systems or find bugs in their designs. Depending on the nature of the system, modeling languages that are amenable to logical analysis and the study of correctness properties include logical representations, automata, state charts, Petri nets, dataflow models, or systems of differential equations. Several system models can be analyzed rigorously with the help of techniques such as logical calculi, decision procedures, model checking, and abstraction. LfSA'10 is devoted to the systematic theoretical study, practical development, and applied use of logics for system analysis. The purpose of the LfSA workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners interested in studying practically relevant systems or in developing the logical foundations and analysis tools for their study. Topics ------ * Logics for safety-critical systems (real-time, embedded, hybrid, distributed, stochastic, cyber-physical) * Logic-based methods for development of safety-critical systems * System representations using logics, automata, modeling languages, state charts, Petri nets, dataflow models * Theories, decision procedures, and calculi for system analysis * Model checking, theorem proving, and systematic testing * Case studies for logical system analysis * Applications of system analysis to industrial problems (including automotive, aviation, railway, robotics, process control, mixed analog/digital circuits in chip design) In particular, we invite contributions that bridge the gap between theory and practice or that combine different application domains. Submission Categories --------------------- * Regular papers (up to 15 pages), which should present previously unpublished work (completed or in progress), including descriptions of research, tools, and applications. * Short papers (up to 5 pages), which describe work in progress or aim at initiating discussions. * Presentation-only papers, i.e., papers already submitted or presented at a conference or another workshop; such papers will not be included in the LfSA proceedings but will be presented during the workshop. In addition to informal and electronic workshop proceedings, we consider the option of a special issue in a journal after the workshop. Submission is done via Easychair: https://www.easychair.org/login.cgi?conf=lfsa2010 Important Dates/Deadlines ------------------------- Abstract submission: March 25, 2010 Paper submission: April 1, 2010 Notification: April 28, 2010 Final version due: May 20, 2010 Workshop: July 15, 2010 Workshop/Programme Chairs ------------------------- Andr Platzer (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA) aplatzer@cs.cmu.edu Philipp Rmmer (Oxford University, UK) philr@comlab.ox.ac.uk Programme Committee ------------------- Raul Barbosa (Chalmers, Gothenburg, Sweden) Alessandro Cimatti (IRST Trento, Italy) Stphane Demri (CNRS Cachan, France) Javier Esparza (TU Munich, Germany) Georgios E. Fainekos (Arizona State University, USA) Martin Giese (University of Oslo, Norway) Franjo Ivani (NEC Laboratories Princeton, USA) Einar Broch Johnsen (University of Oslo, Norway) Dexter Kozen (Cornell, Ithaca, USA) Daniel Kroening (Oxford University, UK) Bruce H. Krogh (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA) Marta Kwiatkowska (Oxford University, UK) Larissa Meinicke (Macquarie University, Australia) George J. Pappas (University of Pennsylvania, USA) Jean-Franois Raskin (Universit Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium) Peter H. Schmitt (Karlsruhe University, Germany) Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (MPI Saarbrcken, Germany) Cesare Tinelli (The University of Iowa, USA) Uwe Waldmann (MPI Saarbrcken, Germany)