CALL FOR PAPERS: MSIAAS@SCSC’17

===== Modeling and Simulation of Intelligent, Adaptive and Autonomous Systems 
Track (MSIAAS’17) =====

- held at the 49th Summer Computer Simulation Conference (SCSC 2017)
- July 9-12, 2017
- Bellevue, Washington, USA
- http://scs.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/CFP_MSIAAS-v2.pdf


=== TRACK DESCRIPTION ===

The increasing popularity of the Internet of Things, or IoT metaphor emphasizes 
that heterogeneous
systems are the norm today. A system deployed in a netcentric environment 
eventually becomes a part
of a system of systems (SoS). This SoS also incorporates adaptive and 
autonomous elements (such as
systems that have different levels of autonomy and situated behavior). This 
makes design, analysis
and testing for the system-at-hand a complex endeavor in itself. 

Testing in isolation is not the same as a real-system operation, since the 
system’s behavior is also
determined by the input, which evolves from the environment. This exact factor 
is difficult to
predict, due to an ever-increasing level of autonomy. Advanced Modeling and 
Simulation (M&S)
frameworks are required in order to facilitate SoS design, development, 
testing, and integration.
In more particular, these frameworks have to provide methods to deal with 
intelligent, emergent, and
adaptive behavior as well as autonomy. 

The subject of emergent behavior and M&S of emergent behaviors takes the center 
stage in such systems
as it is unknown how a particular system responds in the face of emergent 
behavior arising out of
interactions with other complex systems. Intelligent behavior is also defined 
as an emergent property
in some complex systems. Consequently, systems that respond and adapt to such 
behaviors may be called
intelligent systems as well. 

This track has two objectives.

The first objective aims to focus on M&S of the following aspects of complex 
SoS engineering and
brings researchers, developers and industry practitioners working in the areas 
of complex, adaptive
and autonomous SoS engineering that may incorporate human as an integral part 
of SoS operations.
This objective covers the following topics:

- Theory for adaptive and autonomous systems 
- Intelligence-based systems 
- Computational intelligence and cognitive systems 
- Human-in-the-loop systems 
- M&S Frameworks for intelligent behavior 
- Methodologies, tools, and architectures for adaptive control systems 
- Knowledge engineering, generation and management in IAAS 
- Weak and Strong emergent behavior, Emergent Engineering 
- Complex adaptive systems engineering 
- Self-* (organization, explanation, configuration) capability and 
collaborative behavior in IAAS 
- Applications to robotics, unmanned vehicles systems, swarm technology, 
semantic web technology, and
multi-agent systems 
- Netcentric IAAS 
- Live, Virtual and Constructive (LVC) environments 
- Simulator design for IAAS systems 
- Modeling tools for IAAS design 
- Modeling, engineering, testing and verification of complex behavior 
- Development and testing of complex and distributedsystems 
- Modeling, simulating, and testing IoT environments and applications 

The second objective is to advance the science of complexity as applicable in 
M&S discipline.
Complexity is a multi-level phenomenon that exists at structural, behavioral 
and knowledge levels in
such SoS. Emergent behavior is an outcome of this complexity. Understanding 
emergent behavior as an
outcome of this complexity will provide foundation for resilient intelligent 
systems. Following are
some of the topics related to this objective, but not limited to:

- Complexity in Structure: network, hierarchical, small-world, flat, etc. 
- Complexity in Behavior: Micro and macro behaviors, local and global 
behaviors, teleologic and
epistemological behaviors 
- Complexity in Knowledge: ontology design, ontology-driven modeling, 
ontology-evaluation, ontology
transformation, etc. 
- Complexity in Human-in-the-loop: artificial agents, cognitive agents, 
multi-agents, man-in-loop,
human-computer-interaction 
- Complexity in intelligence-based systems: Situated behavior, knowledge-based 
behavior, memoic
behavior, resource-constrained systems, energy-aware systems 
- Complexity in adaptation and autonomy 
- Complexity in architecture: Flat, full-mesh, hierarchical, adaptive, swarm, 
transformative
- Complexity in awareness: Self-* (organization, explanation, configuration) 
- Complexity in interactions: collaboration, negotiation, greedy, rule-based, 
environment-based, etc. 
- Complexity in Live, Virtual and Constructive environment 
- Complexity in Artificial Systems, Social systems, techno-economic-social 
systems
- Complexity in Model Engineering of complex SoS 
- Complexity in Model Specification using modeling languages and architecture 
frameworks such as UML,
PetriNets, SysML, DoDAF, MoDAF, etc. 
- Complexity in Simulation environment engineering: distributed simulation, 
parallel simulation,
cloud simulation, netcentric parallel distributed environments 
- Complexity in Testing and Evaluation tools for SoS engineering 
- Complexity in Heterogeneity: Hardware/Software Co-design, Hardware in the 
Loop, Cyber Physical
Systems, the Internet of Things 
- Metrics for Complexity design and evaluation 
- Verification, validation and accreditation of Complexity in SoS 
- Application of Complexity aspects in domain engineering: Financial, Power, 
Robotics, Swarm,
Economic, Policy, etc. 
- SoS Failure due to Complexity 

=== Important Dates ===

Paper Submission: February 20, 2017
Author Notification: May 1, 2017
Submission of Work in Progress (SCSC-WIP) Papers: May 5, 2017
Notification of Work in Progress: May 10, 2017
Camera-ready Paper: May 14, 2017

=== Track Chair(s) ===

Saurabh Mittal, MITRE Corporation ([email protected]) 
Jose L. Risco Martin, Universidad Complutense de Madrid ([email protected]) 
Marco Lützenberger, DAI-Lab, TU Berlin, Germany 
([email protected]) 
Claudia Szabo, University of Adelaide, Australia 
([email protected]) 

=== Submission Guidelines ===

Original and high-quality technical papers are solicited for review, possible 
presentation and
subsequent publication in the conference proceedings. For further instructions, 
please refer to the
Submission Instructions in the SCS Conference Proceedings Management System web 
site. Contributed
papers should be 5 to 12 pages long. They will be peer reviewed and – if 
accepted and presented at
the conference submitted to the ACM Digital Library. Papers must not have 
appeared before (or be
pending) in a journal or conference with published proceedings, nor may they be 
under review or
submitted to another forum during SummerSim’17 review process. At least one 
author of an accepted
paper must register for the symposium and must present the paper at the 
symposium. For author
guidelines on how to submit a paper, see: http://scs.org/authorskit/


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