Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory
From Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory
The Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory (CPSL) at Washington University in St. Louis performs cutting-edge research on real-time systems, wireless sensor networks, wireless health, and integrated systems that cross-cut these areas and other engineering disciplines.
Projects
- An Interdisciplinary Approach to Detecting Falls Among the Elderly
- CyberMech, a Novel Run-Time Substrate for Cyber-Mechanical Systems
- Home Area Networks for Smart Energy and Home Automation - Real-World Study and Protocols for Reliable Wireless Sensor Networking in Residential Environments
- MAC Layer Architecture - A Component-based Architecture for MAC protocols of Wireless Sensor Networks
- Real-Time Sensor Networks - Real-Time Scheduling and Analysis for Wireless Sensor-Actuator Networks such as WirelessHART
- Structural Health Monitoring and Control - Cyber-Physical Co-Design of Wireless Monitoring and Control for Civil Infrastructure
- Submodular Optimization
- Protocols and Analysis for Predictable Wireless Sensor Networks
- Reconfigurable MAC Architecture
- RT-Xen: Real-Time Virtualization based on Hierarchical Scheduling
- WSN Testbed - A Wireless Sensor Network Deployed in Computer Science Buildings.
- Wireless Sensor Network Technology for Clinical Monitoring
Past Projects
- Adaptive Resource Control for Certifiable Systems
- Adaptive QoS Control in Distributed Real-Time Embedded Systems
- Agilla - A mobile agent middleware for wireless sensor networks.
- Agimone - A middleware system that combines multiple wireless sensor networks by allowing mobile agents to migrate between them.
- Configurable Cyberphysical Instrument for Real-time Hybrid Testing
- Fluid Software Infrastructure for Wireless Sensor Networks
- Multi-resolution Location Directory Service - A mobile entity location monitoring system.
- Servilla - A Flexible Service Provisioning Middleware for Heterogeneous Sensor Networks.
- Spatiotemporal Protocols and Analysis in Wireless Sensor Network
- Unified and Configurable Power Management for Wireless Sensor Networks