CPS Week 2018 Advance Program ‧ R16 - Palácio da Bolsa - Level 1 - Sala dos Retratos

This combined program is provided 'as is'. More up-to-date information may be avalialbe at each event's official websites.

CPS Week 2018 Program Overview

R16 - Palácio da Bolsa - Level 1 - Sala dos Retratos

Palácio da Bolsa
Portraits Room - R16 (Level 1)
R. de Ferreira Borges, 4050-253 Porto
Decorated in Louis XVI style, this room honours the last six kings of the Bragança dynasty. What stands out the most is, without a doubt, the pavement with a rare visual effect of illusory depth.

With this symbolic homage, the Porto Commercial Association thanked D. Maria II the donation of the ruins of the extinct convent S. Francisco.

The exposed table, by the Portuguese wood carver Zeferino José Pinto, took three years to be completed and achieved an honourable mention at the universal exposition of Paris in 1867.
www.palaciodabolsa.com

April 10

see all CPS Week events for this day

09:00 - 10:00MCPSWorkshop Keynote - A Reference Architecture for Mixed-Criticality Medical Devices with an Exemplar PCA Pump Device
John Hatcliff, Kansas State University
Building safe and secure interoperable medical devices with accompanying assurance artifacts can often be challenging task. In industry, many start-up companies have great ideas for innovation, but are not familiar with appropriate safety/security-critical engineering processes, architecture principles, risk management, and assurance techniques. Larger, more experienced, companies may face hurdles in re-engineering their devices for interoperability and greater security. In academia, researchers often have good techniques for addressing some of the issues above, but are not familiar with how a realistic medical device is developed and assured. Building a prototype medical device for a classroom project or research work to validate proposed techniques is often a huge effort.

In this talk, I will describe a open-source reference architecture developed by Adventium Labs and Kansas State University for interoperable medical devices and the Open PCA Pump built using the reference architecture and associated hardware. The Intrinsically Secure, Open and Safe Cyber-Physically Enabled, Life-Critical Essential Services (ISOSCELES) architecture is a reference implementation for future mixed-criticality medical and Internet of Things (IoT) system designs. By the use of a partitioning architecture based on hypervisor technology, the reference implementation enables manufacturers to focus on the clinical side of their product, reducing the time and effort spent ensuring that security vulnerabilities in the resulting platform minimize adverse impacts on patient safety. The Open PCA Pump illustrates a full suite of realistic development artifacts that academic researchers can leverage in their work including use cases, requirements, architecture models, verified source code, testing and simulation infrastructure, risk management artifacts, and assurance cases.

This work is sponsored by the US Department of Homeland Security and the US National Science Foundation Food and Drug Administration Scholar-in-Residence program.
10:30 - 12:30MCPSWorkshop Session 1
Session Chair: James Wimer

Mitigating security attacks on authentication-enhanced OpenICE. Zhangtan Li, Liang Cheng and Yang Zhang

A Use Error Taxonomy for Improving Human-Machine Interface Design in Medical Devices. Carlos Silva, Paolo Masci, Yi Zhang, Paul Jones and Jose C. Campos

Towards A Test and Validation Framework for Closed-Loop Physiology Management Systems for Critical and Perioperative Care. Farooq Gessa, Philip Asare, Aaron Bray, Rachel Clipp and Mark Poler

The benefits of using interactive device simulations as training material for clinicians: an experience report with a contrast media injector used in CT. Cinzia Bernardeschi, Paolo Masci, Davide Caramella and Ruggero Dell'Osso

14:00 - 16:00MCPSWorkshop Session 2
Session Chair: Philip Asare

RePulmo: A Remote Pulmonary Monitoring System. Hung Nguyen, Radoslav Ivanov, Sara Demauro and James Weimer

Towards a Cognitive Assistant System for Emergency Response. Sarah Masud Preum, Sile Shu, Mustafa Hotaki, Ronald Williams, John Stankovic and Homa Alemzadeh

Poster Lighting Talks (5 minutes each)

Followed immediately by the poster session.

Acted, Real and Induced Stress Detection from Speech. Mohsin Ahmed, Apoorva Arunkumar, Brooke Bell, Donna Spruijt-Metz, Kayla De La Haye, John Lach and John Stankovic

DrugSens: A system for Continuous Monitoring of the Anticancer Agent Methotrexate in Patient's Blood. Sophie Farine-Brunner, Enrico Condemi, Martial Geiser, Eric Hochstrasser, Alexandra Homsy, Laure Jeandupeux, Roger Marti, Marc Emil Pfeifer, Gabriel Rittiner, Pierre Roduit, Christophe Schalcher, Jean-Manuel Segura, Alexandre Sierro, Alena Simalatsar, Florian Telmont and Frederic Truffer

A Light Therapy Platform for Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder. Luis Garcia, Wenjie Wei and James Weimer

Stability analysis of Kalman filer based delivery rate computation algorithm for IV administered anesthetic propofol. Alena Simalatsar, Monia Guidi, Pierre Roduit and Thierry Buclin

Pitch Plus: a Wearable Monitor for Pitching-Induced Stress in Young Athletes. Thomas Borgese, Brett Garberman, Eric Micaleff, Elliot Greenberg, J. Todd R. Lawrence, James Weimer

16:30 - 17:30MCPSWorkshop Panel Discussion
Session Chair: Paolo Masci
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