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= Submission Guidelines = | = Submission Guidelines = |
Revision as of 01:14, 11 October 2017
proposed to ICSE 2018
Gothenburg, Sweden, May 27 - June 03, 2018
Contents |
Theme & Goals
Robotics is one of the most challenging domains for software engineering. Deploying even simple applications requires integrating solutions from experts of various domains, including navigation, path planning, manipulation, localization, human-robot interaction, etc. Integration of modules contributed by respective domain experts is one of the key challenges in engineering software-centric systems, yet only one of the cross-cutting software concerns crucial to robotics. As robots often operate in dynamic, partially observable environments additional challenges include adaptability, robustness, safety, and security.
The goal of RoSE 2018 is to bring together researchers from participating domains with practitioners to identify new frontiers in robotics software engineering, discuss challenges raised by real-world applications, and transfer latest insights from research to industry. RoSE 2018 will solicit contributions from both academic and industrial participants, thus fostering active synergy between the two communities.
Topics of Interest
RoSE 2018 seeks contributions addressing, but not limited to, the following topics related to robotics software engineering:
- Analysis of challenges in robotic software engineering
- Architectures that lead to reusable robotic software engineering
- Challenges for defining and integrating domain-specific languages for the design of robotic systems
- Continuous integration and deployment in robotics
- Description and analysis of design principles promoting quality of service (e.g., performance, energy efficiency) attributes
- Engineering the collaboration of multiple (heterogeneous) robots
- Identification and description of design principles in robot software architectures
- Lessons learned in the engineering and deployment of large-scale, real-world integrated robot software architectures
- Machine learning in safety-critical domains
- Metrics to measure nun-functional properties (e.g., robustness, availability, etc.) and their application
- State-of-the-art research projects, innovative ideas, and field-based studies
- Software engineering best practices in robotics
- Processes and tools supporting the engineering and development of robotic systems
- Variability, Modularity, and Reusability in robotics
- Validation and verification of robot software software
Workshop Program
The full day workshop will have the following schedule:
- tba -
Submission Guidelines
Prospective participants are invited to submit
- research papers presenting novel contributions on advancing software engineering in robotics (6-8 pages)
- challenge showcase papers describing robotics challenges considered insufficiently addressed from an industry perspective (4-6 pages)
- vision papers on the future of software engineering in robotics (2-4 pages)
Workshop papers must follow the ICSE 2018 Format and Submission Guideline. All submitted papers will be reviewed on the basis of technical quality, relevance, significance, and clarity by the program committee. All workshop papers should be submitted electronically in PDF format through the workshop website. Accepted papers will become part of the workshop proceedings.
Important Dates
- Mon 5 Feb 2018: Workshop papers submissions
- Mon 5 Mar 2018: Notification of accepted papers (strict deadline)
- Mon 19 Mar 2018: Camera ready copies (strict deadline)
Organizing Committee
- Federico Ciccozzi, Mälardalen University, Sweden
- Davide Di Ruscio, University of L’Aquila, Italy
- Ivano Malavolta, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Patrizio Pelliccione, Chalmers University of Technology | University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Andreas Wortmann, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Program Committee
- Leif Ahlman, Drones Networking, Sweden
- Karl-Erik Årzén, University of Lund, Sweden
- Mauro Birattari, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium
- Darko Bozhinoski, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
- Davide Brugali, University of Bergamo, Italy
- Mathias Buerger, Bosch, Germany
- Javier Camara Moreno, CMU, USA
- Alessandro di Fava, Pal Robotics, Spainn
- Juergen Dingel, Queen's School of Computing, Canada
- Francesco Ferro, Pal Robotics, Spain
- David Garlan, CMU, USA
- Holger Giese, Hasso-Plattner-Institut, Germany
- Sebastian Götz, University of Dresden, Germany
- Peter Gorm Larsen, Aarhus University, Denmark
- Fredrik Heintz, Linköping University, Sweden
- Rogardt Heldal, Høgskulen på Vestlandet, Norway
- Nico Hochgeschwender, Bonn-Rhine-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, Germany
- Rajeev Joshi, JPL, USA
- Danica Kragic, KTH, Sweden
- Martina Maggio, University of Lund, Sweden
- Claudio Menghi, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Arne Nordmann, Bosch, Germany
- Ivan Ruchkin, CMU, USA
- Andrey Rusakov, ETH, Switzerland
- Christian Schlegel, University of Applied Sciences Ulm, Germany
- Ulrik Pagh Schultz, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
- Ulrike Thomas, University of Chemnitz, Germany
- Jana Tumova, KTH, Sweden
- Andrzej Wasowski, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark
- Sebastian Wrede, University of Bielefeld, Germany