As developers continue to build greater autonomy into cyber-physical systems (CPSs), such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and automobiles, these systems aggregate data from an increasing number of sensors. However, more sensors not only create more data and more precise data, but they require a complex architecture to correctly transfer and process multiple data streams. This increase in complexity comes with additional challenges for functional verification and validation, a greater potential for faults, and a larger attack surface. What’s more, CPSs often cannot distinguish faults from attacks. To address these challenges, researchers from the SEI and Georgia Tech collaborated on an effort to map the problem space and develop proposals for solving the challenges of increasing sensor data in CPSs. In this podcast from the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute, Jerome Hugues, a principal researcher in the SEI Software Solutions Division, discusses this collaboration and its larger body of work, Safety Analysis and Fault Detection Isolation and Recovery (SAFIR) Synthesis for Time-Sensitive Cyber-Physical Systems.
Agile DevOps
Kicking Butt in Computer Science: Women in Computing at Carnegie Mellon University
Is Software Spoiling Us? Technical Innovations in the Department of Defense
Is Software Spoiling Us? Innovations in Daily Life from Software
How Risk Management Fits into Agile & DevOps in Government
5 Best Practices for Preventing and Responding to Insider Threat
Pharos Binary Static Analysis: An Update
Positive Incentives for Reducing Insider Threat
Mission-Practical Biometrics
At Risk Emerging Technology Domains
DNS Blocking to Disrupt Malware
Best Practices: Network Border Protection
Verifying Software Assurance with IBM’s Watson
The CERT Software Assurance Framework
Scaling Agile Methods
Ransomware: Best Practices for Prevention and Response
Integrating Security in DevOps
SEI Fellows Series: Peter Feiler
NTP Best Practices
Establishing Trust in Disconnected Environments
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free