CyberPhysical Systems: Decision Making Mechanisms and Applications describes essential theory, recent research and large-scale user cases that addresses urgent challenges in CPS architectures. In particular, it includes chapters on:
Athens (N.T.U.A.), Greece. His research interests are in the areas of reconfigurable and embedded systems, the development of Computer-Aided Design (CAD) algorithms, the cyber-physical systems, as well as the implementation of low-complexity control mechanisms. He has published more than 150 papers in international journals and conferences, while he is also co-author or co-editor of 7 books of Springer and CRC. Starting from 2002 he has participated as principal investigator in more than 20 research projects funded from the European Commission (E.C.), European Space Agency (E.S.A.), as well as the Greek Government and Industry.
Dimitrios Soudris is an Assoc. Professor in School of ECE of National Technical University of Athens, Greece. His research interests include embedded systems design, reconfigurable architectures, network-on-chip architectures and low-power VLSI design. He has published more than 400 papers in international journals and conferences. He is author and editor in eight books of Kluwer and Springer. His research work has been cited >2400 times. He is the Head of Embedded Systems group consisting of four Senior Investigators (Post-Docs) and eight Ph.D. students and a number of M.Sc. students. He is leader and principal investigator in numerous research projects (>45) funded from the European Commission, ENIAC-JU, European Space Agency and the Greek Government and Industry. He served as General Chair and Program Chair for PATMOS and General Chair of IFIP-VLSI-SOC 2008, PARMA 2011 & 2013 Workshop, SAMOS 2015, HiPEAC CSW 2014. He received an award from INTEL and IBM for the project results of LPGD #25256 and awards from Int. Conf. VLSI 2005 and ASP-DAC 05 for the results of the project AMDREL IST-2001-34379 and recently the HiPEAC Award for a DAC '10 paper for the project MNEMEE FP7-216224 and DAC '13 for the project ENIAC-TOISE-282557-2.
Elias Kosmatopoulos received the Diploma, M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from the Technical University of Crete, Greece, in 1990, 1992, and 1995, respectively. He is currently a Professor with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace, Xanthi, Greece. Previously, he was a faculty member of the Department of Production Engineering and Management, Technical University of Crete (TUC), Greece, a Research Assistant Professor with the Department of Electrical Engineering Systems, University of Southern California (USC) and a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Victoria, B.C., Canada. Dr. Kosmatopoulos' research interests are in the areas of adaptive optimization and control, IoT and Cyper-Physical Systems and their applications to energy efficient buildings, smart grids, robotics and intelligent transportation systems. He is the author of over 55 journal papers. He serves as an Associate Editor for IEEE Trans. on Intelligent Transportation Systems. He has been leading many research projects funded by the European Union with a total budget of about 20 Million Euros.