Ninth ACM International Workshop on Formal Techniques for Safety-Critical Systems

Event Dates

Oct 22, 2023 - Oct 22, 2023

Location

Cascais, Portugal

Submission Deadline

Jul 21, 2023

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Call for Papers

FTSCS 2023

9th ACM International Workshop on Formal Techniques for Safety-Critical Systems

Cascais, Portugal, October 22, 2023

(an OOPSLA/SPLASH 2023 workshop)

https://2023.splashcon.org/home/ftscs-2023

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*** Submission deadline extended to July 21 ***

*** ACM Digital Library proceedings ***

*** Science of Computer Programming special issue (tbc) ***

Aims and Scope:

There is an increasing demand for using formal methods to validate and

verify safety-critical systems in fields such as power generation and

distribution, avionics, automotive systems, medical systems, and

autonomous vehicles. In particular, newer standards, such as DO-178C

(avionics), ISO 26262 (automotive systems), IEC 62304 (medical

devices), and CENELEC EN 50128 (railway systems), emphasize the need

for formal methods and model-based development, thereby speeding up

the adaptation of such methods in industry.

The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers and engineers

who are interested in the application of formal and semi-formal methods

to improve the quality of safety-critical computer systems. FTSCS

strives to promote research and development of formal methods and

tools for industrial applications, and is particularly interested in

industrial applications of formal methods.

Specific topics include, but are not limited to:

* case studies and experience reports on the use of formal methods for

analyzing safety-critical systems, including avionics, automotive,

medical, railway, and other kinds of safety-critical and

QoS-critical systems

* methods, techniques and tools to support automated analysis,

certification, debugging, etc., of safety/QoS-critical systems

* analysis methods that address the limitations of formal methods in

industry (usability, scalability, etc.)

* formal analysis support for modeling languages used in industry,

such as AADL, Ptolemy, SysML, SCADE, Modelica, etc.

* code generation from validated models.

The workshop will provide a platform for discussions and the exchange of

innovative ideas, so submissions on work in progress are encouraged.

Submission:

We solicit submissions reporting on:

A- original research contributions (10 pages max, ACM format);

B- applications and experiences (10 pages max, ACM format);

C- surveys, comparisons, and state-of-the-art reports (10 pages max, ACM);

D- tool papers (5 pages max, ACM format);

E- position papers and work in progress (5 pages max, ACM format)

related to the topics mentioned above.

(The page limits do not include the references.) KTH currently does

not allow collaboration with Russia or Belarus. We therefore cannot

accept papers with affiliation in Russia or Belarus.

All submissions must be original, unpublished, and not submitted

concurrently for publication elsewhere. Paper submission is done

via HotCRP at https://ftscs23.hotcrp.com/.

Submissions should be prepared in LaTeX, adhering to

the ACM format available at

https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template using the

“sigplan” option.

Publication:

All accepted papers will appear in the pre-proceedings of FTSCS 2023.

Accepted papers in the categories A-D above will appear in the

workshop proceedings that will be published as a volume in

the ACM Digital Library.

As usual, we plan to invite authors of selected accepted papers to

submit extended versions of their papers to a special issue of the

Science of Computer Programming journal (to be confirmed).

Important dates:

Submission deadline: Extended to July 21, 2023 (AoE)

Notification of acceptance: August 27, 2023

Camera ready paper due: September 10, 2023

Workshop: October 22, 2023

Venue:

Cascais, Portugal

Program chairs:

Cyrille Artho (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

Peter Olveczky (University of Oslo, Norway)

Program committee:

Etienne Andre (University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France)

Cyrille Artho (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

Kyungmin Bae (Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea)

Armin Biere (Albert-Ludwigs-University Freiburg, Germany)

Patricia Derler (Zoox, USA)

Alessandro Fantechi (University of Florence, Italy)

Marie Farrell (University of Manchester, UK)

Osman Hasan (National University of Sciences & Technology, Pakistan)

Eduard Kamburjan (University of Oslo, Norway)

Alexander Knapp (University of Augsburg, Germany)

Yi Li (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

Frederic Mallet (University of Cote d’Azur, France)

Lina Marsso (University of Toronto, Canada)

Thomas Noll (RWTH Aachen University, Germany)

Kazuhiro Ogata (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan)

Carlos Olarte (University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France)

Peter Olveczky (University of Oslo, Norway)

Laure Petrucci (University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France)

Jose Proenca (CISTER Research Centre, Portugal)

Cristina Seceleanu (Malardalen University, Sweden)

Sofiene Tahar (Concordia University, Canada)

Carolyn Talcott (SRI International, USA)

Huibiao Zhu (East China Normal University, China)