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Sistemi Software 2017/2018
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Oct 17Discrete-event Modeling And Simulation Methodologies: Past, Present And Future - Seminario
AVVISO DI SEMINARIO
Martedì 17 Ottobre 2017 – ore 15.00
Aula Galileo – Centro Congressi Macroarea Ingegneria
Discrete-Event Modeling and
Simulation Methodologies:
Past, Present and Future
Prof. Gabriel A. Wainer
Department of Systems and Computer Engineering
Carleton University
Ottawa –
CANADA
www.sce.carleton.ca/faculty/wainer
Abstract
Modeling and
Simulation (M&S) methods have been used to better analyze the behavior of
complex physical systems and it is now common to use simulation as a part of
the scientific and technological discovery process. M&S advanced thanks to
the improvements in computer technology, which, in many cases, resulted in the
development of simulation software using ad-hoc techniques. Formal M&S
appeared in order to try to improve the development task of very complex
simulation systems. Some of these techniques proved to be successful in
providing a sound base for the development of discrete-event simulation models,
improving the ease of model definition and enhancing the application
development tasks; reducing costs and favoring reuse. The DEVS formalism is one of these
techniques, which proved to be successful in providing means for modeling while
reducing development complexity and costs. DEVS model development is based on a
sound theoretical framework. The independence of M&S tasks made possible to
run DEVS models on different environments (personal computers, parallel
computers, real-time equipment, and distributed simulators) and middleware. We
will present a historical perspective of discrete-event M&S methodologies,
showing different modeling techniques. We will introduce DEVS origins and general
ideas, and compare it with some of these techniques. We will then show the
current status of DEVS M&S, and we will discuss a technological perspective
to solve current M&S problems (including real-time simulation,
interoperability and model-centered development techniques). We will show some
examples of the current use of DEVS, including applications in different
fields. We will finally show current open topics in the area, which include
advanced methods for centralized, parallel or distributed simulation, the need
of real-time modeling techniques, and our view in these fields.
Speaker Bio
GABRIEL A. WAINER, FSCS,
SMIEEE, received the M.Sc. (1993) at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina,
and the Ph.D. (1998, with highest honors) at the Université d’Aix-Marseille
III, France. In July 2000, he joined the Department of Systems and Computer
Engineering at Carleton University (Ottawa, ON, Canada), where he is now Full
Professor and Associate Chair for Graduate Studies. He has held visiting
positions at the University of Arizona; LSIS (CNRS), Université Paul Cézanne,
University of Nice, INRIA Sophia-Antipolis, Université de Bordeaux (France);
UCM, UPC (Spain), University of Buenos Aires, National University of Rosario
(Argentina) and others. He is the author of three books and over 320 research
articles; he edited four other books, and helped organizing numerous
conferences, including being one of the founders of the Symposium on Theory of
Modeling and Simulation, SIMUTools and SimAUD. Prof. Wainer was Vice-President
Conferences and Vice-President Publications, and is a member of the Board of
Directors of the SCS. Prof. Wainer is the Special Issues Editor of SIMULATION,
member of the Editorial Board of IEEE Computing in Science and Engineering,
Wireless Networks (Elsevier), Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation (SCS).
He is the head of the Advanced Real-Time Simulation lab, located at Carleton
University's Centre for advanced Simulation and Visualization (V-Sim). He has
been the recipient of various awards, including the IBM Eclipse Innovation
Award, SCS Leadership Award, and various Best Paper awards. He has been awarded
Carleton University's Research Achievement Award (2005, 2014), the First
Bernard P. Zeigler DEVS Modeling and Simulation Award, the SCS Outstanding
Professional Award (2011), Carleton University’s Mentorship Award (2013), the
SCS Distinguished Professional Award (2013), and the SCS Distinguished Service
Award (2015). He is a Fellow of SCS. He is the Program Chair of the Winter
Simulation Conference 2017.