Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory
From Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory
Jump to navigationJump to searchThe Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory (CPSL) at Washington University in St. Louis performs cutting-edge research on real-time systems, wireless sensor networks, embedded systems and cyber-physical systems that cross-cut computing, networking and other engineering disciplines.
What is Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS)? CPS is a holistic design methodology that co-designs the cyber and physical aspects of networked embedded systems. By breaking the barrier between cyber and physical designs, CPS will result in drastic improvement to networked embedded systems and new systems that we cannot build today. This talk elaborates on our perspective on CPS.
Updates
- [News] Dr. Chenyang Lu named IEEE Fellow (Citation: for Contributions to Adaptive Real-Time Computing Systems) (1/2016)
- [Paper] Real-Time Wireless Sensor-Actuator Networks for Industrial Cyber-Physical Systems [Proceedings of the IEEE]
- [Paper] Schedulability Analysis under Graph Routing in WirelessHART Networks [RTSS'15]
- [Paper] Mortality Prediction in ICUs Using a Novel Time-Slicing Cox Regression Method [Distinguished Paper Award of AMIA-15]
- [Paper] RT-OpenStack: CPU Resource Management for Real-Time Cloud Computing [CLOUD'15]
- [Software] Benchmark Problem in Active Structural Control with Wireless Sensor Network
- [News] The New ACM Transactions on Cyber-Physical Systems Open for Submission (5/2015)
- [News] Check out the New Web Site for ACM Transactions on Sensor Networks (5/2015)
- [News] CPSL alumnus Abusayeed Saifullah received the inaugural Jonathan S. Turner Dissertation Award (5/2015)
- [Paper] Prioritizing Soft Real-Time Network Traffic in Virtualized Hosts Based on Xen [RTAS'15]
- [Paper] When Thermal Control Meets Sensor Noise: Analysis of Noise-induced Temperature Error [RTAS'15]
- [Paper] Incorporating Emergency Alarms in Reliable Wireless Process Control [ICCPS'15]
- [News] Dr. Chenyang Lu named Fullgraf Professor at Washington University in St. Louis (Photos,Video) (2/2015)
- [Paper] Implementation and Experimentation of Industrial Wireless Sensor-Actuator Network Protocols [EWSN'15]
- [Software] RT-Xen's real-time scheduler (RTDS) included in the Xen hypervisor (1/2015)
- [News] CapNet paper received the Best Paper Award at RTSS'14! (12/2014)
- [Paper] CapNet: a Real-Time Wireless Management Network for Data Center Power Capping [RTSS'14]
- [Talk] Perspective on the Future of Embedded Systems and ESWeek [ESWeek'14 Panel]
- [Paper] Real-Time Multi-Core Virtual Machine Scheduling in Xen [EMSOFT'14]
- [Paper] Real-Time System Support for Hybrid Structural Simulation [EMSOFT'14]
- [News] Telecommunications Graduate Initiative course on Networked Embedded Systems [University Colleage Cork] (7/2014)
- [Talk] Real-Time Wireless Control Networks for Cyber-Physical Systems [University Colleage Cork] (7/2014)
- [News] PhD student Jing Li selected to attend Heidelberg Laureate Forum [Heidelberg Laureate Forum]
- [News] CPSL alumni Guoliang Xing received Withrow Distinguished Scholar Junior Award at Michigan State University.
- [Paper] Thermal Modeling for a HVAC Controlled Real-life Auditorium [Talk] [ICDCS'14]
- [Paper] CloudPowerCap: Integrating Power Budget and Resource Management across a Virtualized Server Cluster [ICAC'14]
- [Talk] RT-Xen: Real-Time Virtualization for Embedded and Cloud Computing [HKPU]
- [Talk] Challenges in Wireless Control Networks for Cyber-Physical Systems [INFOCOM'14 CPS Panel]
- [News] Real-Time Virtualization Software to Enable Embedded Systems Integration [Press Release]
- [Software] RT-Xen: Real-Time Virtualization in Xen [Xen Blog]
- [Talk] Wireless Clinical Monitoring at Scale [DGIF Distinguished Lecture]
- [News] Q&A: Melding Software Models with Sensor Networks Could Save Lives [IEEE Spectrum]
- [News] Featured in IEEE Spectrum Podcast on Smart Bridges [IEEE Spectrum]
- [News] Engineering Professor Working to Help Bridges Survive Natural Disaster
- [News] Wireless Clinical Monitoring project featured in a special report in IEEE Signal Processing Magazine