Title :
Keynote Talk: Challenges in Automotive Cyber-physical Systems Design
Author :
Chakraborty, Shiladri
Author_Institution :
Tech. Univ. of Munich, Munich, Germany
Abstract :
Systems with tightly interacting computational (cyber) units and physical systems are generally referred to as cyber-physical systems. They involve an interplay between embedded systems, control theory, real-time systems and software engineering. A very good example of cyber-physical systems design arises in the context of automotive architectures and software. Modern high-end cars have 50-100 processors or electronic control units (ECUs) that communicate over a network of buses such as CAN and FlexRay. In such complex settings, traditional control-theoretic approaches - where control engineers are only concerned with high-level plant and controller models - start breaking down. Instead it becomes necessary to adopt a more holistic, cyber-physical systems design approach where the semantic gap between high-level control models and their actual implementations on multiprocessor platforms is quantified and consciously closed. We will give several examples on how this may be done and the current research challenges facing both academia and the industry.
Keywords :
automobiles; automotive electronics; embedded systems; multiprocessing systems; software engineering; system buses; automotive architectures; automotive cyber-physical systems design; automotive software; buses network; computational units; control engineers; control-theoretic approach; electronic control units; embedded systems; high-end cars; high-level control models; high-level plant; multiprocessor platforms; real-time systems; semantic gap; software engineering; Automotive engineering; Awards activities; Electric vehicles; Embedded systems; Real time systems; System analysis and design;
Conference_Titel :
VLSI Design (VLSID), 2012 25th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Hyderabad
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0438-2
DOI :
10.1109/VLSID.2012.27