UKSim2018

image004

IEEE Conference Record No. #44095

UKSim-AMSS 20th International Conference on Modelling & Simulation

 

Cambridge University (Emmanuel College), 27 - 29 March 2018

 

 

View UKSim2015 papers in uksim.info online Digital Library, use Internet Explorer only to see full papers content

View proceedings in ACM Digital Library: UKSim2014

View proceedings in IEEE Xplore Digital Library: UKSim2008, UKSim2009, UKSim2010,

UKSim2011, UKSim2012, UKSim2013, UKSim2014, UKSim2015, UKSim2016, UKSim2017

 

 

image004

 

Important Dates

Call for Papers

Paper Submission

IEEE Paper Templates

Registration

Venue/Rooms

Cambridge

College Accommodation

Accommodation

Travel to Cambridge

Flights & Travel

Social Events

 

 

 

 

Keynote/Tutorial Speakers

TOBA

 

 

Important Dates

Submission: See above

 

 

Notification

Paper: from 1 Feb

Final Upload into EDAS for checking &

Registration

(Payment):

20 February

Credit Card on EDAS

 

Camera-ready

to IEEE server & copyright form:

27 February

 

 

Conference Chair: Alessandra Orsoni

 

Honorary Programme Chair: Adam Brentnall

 

Local Arrangements/

Venue Chair: Richard Cant

 

General Chair:

David Al-Dabass

 

Publication Research Editor:

Zuwairie Ibrahim

 

General Co-Chair:

Ajith Abraham

 

EUROSIM Liaison Chair

Alessandra Orsoni

Papers with Top Review Scores of 0.8 and 0.9

 

CD, CD label, Opening Session

 

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________

________    ______________________________________________________________________________________

Paper Submission Extended deadline, 17 February 2018

 

Write your paper using these Templates:

Word template (MS Word .doc format)

PDF template (PDF format)

 

And Submit to EDAS http://edas.info , UKSim2018 (kindly ignore all formatting error messages from EDAS, our editors will check it and tell you exactly how to repair it, no need to repeatedly re-upload your paper to EDAS)

 

Conference venue and accommodation: Emmanuel College, St Andrews Street, Cambridge, CB2 3AP.

 

Other accommodation in Cambridge

 

===========================================================================================================

Papers are invited on any aspect of modelling and simulation to be presented at UKSim2018, University of Cambridge (Emmanuel College). The accommodation, renowned catering and conference facilities are an ideal blend of modern and historic. The venue offers an especially attractive opportunity for both professional discussion and socialising.

 

Full Paper (six pages with figures) are invited on any aspect of modelling, simulation and their applications.

 

Tracks/Themes

 

- Intelligent Systems

- Hybrid Intelligent Systems

- Soft Computing and Hybrid Soft Computing

- Computational Intelligence

- Systems Intelligence

- Intelligence Systems

- Control of Intelligent Systems

- Control Intelligence

- e-Science and e-Systems

- Robotics, Cybernetics, Engineering, Manufacturing and Control

- Methodologies, Tools and Operations Research

- Bio-informatics and Bio-Medical Simulation

- Discrete Event and Real Time Systems

- Image, Speech and Signal Processing

- Natural Language Processing/language technologies

- Computer Generated Art (images to be exhibited at the conference and included in the proceedings CD)

- Industry, Business and Management

- Human Factors and Social Issues

- Energy, Power Generation and Distribution

- Transport, Logistics, Harbour, Shipping and Marine Simulation

- Supply Chain Management

- Virtual Reality, Visualization and Computer Games

- Parallel and Distributed Architectures and Systems

- Internet Modelling, Semantic Web and Ontologies

- Mobile/Ad hoc wireless networks, mobicast, sensor placement, target tracking

- Performance Engineering of Computer & Communication Systems

- Circuits, Sensors and Devices

 

Suggested topics (other topics are also welcome): Simulation methodology and practice, languages, tools and techniques. Models and modelling tools. Data/object bases. Analytical and statistical tools. Simulators and simulation hardware, training simulators. Integration of simulation with concurrent engineering, integrated design and simulation systems. AI, intelligent systems, agent-based simulation, decision support systems, philosophical issues, analogies, metaphors, knowledge modelling, acquisition and synthesis of new knowledge/models, intelligent/adaptive behaviour, man/machine interaction, control systems. Parallel and distributed simulation, discrete event systems. Artificial neural networks, computational intelligence.

 

Applications: aerospace; remote sensing; electronic circuits and systems; communication and networks; business; management; finance; economics; leisure, games, war/conflict/rebellion modelling; psychology, cognitive functions, behaviour, emotion, subjectivity; humanities, literature, semantics modelling/dynamics; biology; medicine; public health; energy, power generation and distribution, manufacturing; planning; control; robotics; measurement; monitoring; energy; safety critica1 systems; transportation; structural mechanics and civil engineering, oil and gas; education and training; military.

 

Exhibitors: manufacturers of software and hardware, publishers, etc., are invited to apply to exhibit their products.

Accepted papers will be submitted to the IEEE Digital Library. Selected papers will be considered for publication in the International Journal of Simulation: Systems, Science & Technology.

The registration fee is $595. This will include a copy of the proceedings, refreshments and lunch.

 

Accommodation in College: graduates from Cambridge colleges go on to become leading world scientists, prime ministers, parliamentarians and top civil servants. Share the experience of living-in by staying in college rooms. An all inclusive full-board 3-day package is available for $650, single occupancy. This includes a meal on the evening before the conference, all meals/conference dinner on day 1 and day 2 (including conference pre-dinner reception), and breakfast and lunch on day 3. For those wishing to eat outside, a Bed & Breakfast 3 day package is available at $490 single occupancy. A limited number of en-suite rooms are also available on all-inclusive full board basis at $850 for a 3 day package, single occupancy. Booking and pre-payment is essential,

see EDAS Registration.

Submission Guidelines

 

You are invited to submit:
- full paper of 6 pages (Letter format) for oral presentation,

- computer generated art, submit title and abstract on EDAS as a normal paper then upload the image pdf file only as the Full paper

- proposal to organize a technical session and/or workshop.

Submissions must be original, unpublished work containing new and interesting results that demonstrate current research in all areas of modelling and simulation and their applications in science, technology, business and commerce. The proceedings of the Conference will be submitted to the IEEE Digital Library. The conference is supported/co-sponsored by

 

-                      EUROSIM

-                      European Council for Modelling & Simulation

-                      Society for Computer Simulation Int. (SCS)- Europe

-                      IEEE UK &RI Computer Chapter

-                      Asia Modelling & Simulation Section

 

Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper. All papers are to be submitted electronically,- see full instructions under Paper Submission below, in PDF or Word format. All papers and artwork will be peer reviewed by at least three independent referees of the international program committee.

 

Paper Submission: UKSim2018 is using EDAS for submission, reviews and registration, authors need to:

- create an account with EDAS (if not already have one) at edas.info

- open the list of conferences managed by EDAS & find UKSim2018

- click on Submit button on the right to enter your paper title & abstract

- upload file.

 

Click here to submit paper

 

IEEE Author Kit: emailed to authors on completion of registration/payment on EDAS.

 

Paper Templates:

Word template (MS Word .doc format)

PDF template (PDF format)

 

 

Authors of the best papers will be invited to revise and extend their work for publication in a special issue of the International Journal of Simulation: Systems, Science and Technology.

Conference website: http://uksim2018.info  (http://uksim/uksim2018/uksim2018.htm

 

IEEE Student Members Travel Grants: a limited number of travel bursaries are available for partial support of travel expenses to attend the conference to present the paper, contact the general chair david.al-dabass@ntu.ac.uk

 

Attendance and presentation  

1. Non-attendance does not affect publication in the CD, it only affects submission to I-Xplore (about 6 to 12 months after the conference).

2. Authors who find it impossible to attend but still wish their paper to be submitted to I-Xplore must upload their Presentation file to EDAS for review by the committee to approve submission to I-Xplore. The presentation file must include the reasons and explanation for non attendance in the first slide after the title slide.

3. Authors who confirm their intention to attend and present but do not show up will not have the proceedings CD sent to them nor will their paper be submitted to I-Xplore.

4. The presentation program must be accurate to avoid time waste.

 

I-Xplore: a paper will not be submitted to I-Xplore if it suffers from one or more of the following problems:

1. Below average English,

2. Excessive number of citations to the authors own work in References,

3. Little interaction with EE and Computing,

4. Not within the conference scope or has not followed Template,

5. Author did not offer Valid reasons for not attending or not submitted the presentation file (for committee review) or both.

 

**      **      **

 

  

IPC

Kai Juslin (SIMS)

Esko Juuso (SIMS)

Khalid Al-Begain (UKSim)

Rashid Mehmood (UKSim)

Gaius Mulley (UKSim)

Miroslav Snorek (CSSS)

Andras Javor (HSS)

Franco Maceri (ISCS)

Peter Schwartz (ASIM)

Charles Patchett (BAE, Warton)

Henri Pierreval (FRANCOSIM)

Kambiz Badie (Iran)

Yuri Merkuryev (LSS)

Zulkarnay Zakaria

(Malaysia)

Gaby Neumann (ASIM)

Hosam Faiq (Malaysia)

Hissam Tawfik (UK)

Jiri Kunovsky (CSSS)

Azian Azamimi Abdullah (Malaysia)

Sanjay Chaudhary (India)

Arijit Bhattacharya (Ireland)

Atulya Nagar (UK)

Gregorio Romero (Spain)

Kenneth Nwizege (UK)

Kathy Garden (NZ)

M Luisa Martinez (Spain)

Giuseppe De Francesco (Ireland)

Jerry John Kponyo (Ghana)

Suiping Zhou (Singapore)

Mikulas Alexik (CSSS)

Borut Zupancic (SLOSIM)

Igor Skrjanc (SLOSIM)

Wan Hussain Wan Ishak (Malaysia)

Nitin Nitin (India)

Ford Gaol (Indonesia)

Philip Sallis (NZ)

Martin Tunnicliffe (UK)

David Murray-Smith (UKSim)

Mahdi Mahfouf (UKSim)

Emelio Jimenez Macias (SPAIN)

Danilo Pelusi (Italy)

Alessandra Orsoni (UKSim)

Vlatko Ceric

Theodoros Kostis (Greece)

Russell Cheng (UKSim)

Miguel Angel Piera (Spain)

Antonio Guasch (Spain)

David Al-Dabass (UKSim)

Jadranka Bozikov (CROSSIM)

Richard Cant (UKSim)

Felix Breitenecker (ASIM, SNE)

Eduard Babulak (Canada)

Siegfried Wassertheurer (ASIM)

Wolfgang Wiechert (ASIM)S. Wassertheurer (ASIM)

Janos Sebestyen-Janosy (HSS)

Olaf Ruhle (ASIM)

Zuwairie Ibrahim (Malaysia)

Marius Radulescu (ROMSIM)

Leon Bobrowski (PSCS)

Mojca Indihar Stemberger (Slovenia)

Rosni Abdulla (Malaysia)

Vesna Bosilj-Vuksic (Croatia)

Roland Wertz (Germany)

Norlaili Safri (Malaysia)
Helen Karatza(Greece)

Nikolaos V. Karadimas (Greece)

Afrand Agah (USA)

Piers Campbell (UAE)
Marco Remondino (Italy)

Fabian Bottinger (Germany)

K.G. Subramanian (Malaysia)

Registration (all figures in US$) Currency Converter

Due to the labour intensive process of handling bank transfers a $50 surcharge applies.

Author/Participant

Student Paper

(2 authors maximum)

Student Participant

(no paper)

Credit Card

Bank Transfer

Credit Card

Bank Transfer

Credit Card

Bank Transfer

Registration BEFORE deadline of 1 March

IEEE Members: 5% discount is given to author after presentation at conference

$595

$30

$645

$30

$545

$25

$595

$25

$300

$350

Registration AFTER deadline of 1 March

IEEE Members: 5% discount given to author after presentation at conference

$640

$32

$690

$32

$590

$30

$640

$30

$350

$400

 

Registration: Only one method of payment is available on EDAS:

Credit Card: payment is accepted online and confirmation is instant.

 

Here is the procedure:

 

1. go to EDAS at http://edas.info and click on Register yellow tab at the top, a list of conferences will appear

2. Scroll down to conference name (e.g. UKSim2015) line and click on the extreme right green money symbol at the end of this line, a new page will appear

3. click on the extreme right button (Trolley symbol) after USD $595, a new table will immediately appear under a new line Registered, but no paid.

4. Under this table a list of credit card symbols and SWIFT. Click on the credit card symbol.  

 

5. A new page will appear, enter all card details, scroll down to the bottom and click Pay for Registration

 

6. REMEMBER: NO payment received by the set deadline means your paper will NOT be in the Proceedings.

 

If you have problems meeting this deadline email david.al-dabass@ntu.ac.uk immediately.

 

Best wishes and look forward to meeting you at the conference.

Conference Chairs.

UKSim2018, Papers going to Publication

 

UKSim2018 Conference Program at a Glance

Conditions for Submission to IEEE-Xplore after the conference

1. Presenter must demonstrate deep and detailed knowledge of the paper content by utilizing the full 20 minutes presentation time.

2. The session chair must be satisfied the presenter has answered at least one question in full to the approval of both the session chair and the participants.

3. The value of conference attendance is to get maximum feedback from participants on the significance of the research being presented.

4. Speak clearly and slowly, do not Mumble or race through the sentences, moderate your voice to make sure attendees hear every word you say without shouting.

Session CodeWed.am2.A means Wednesday morning after tea break in room A. Other Time periods: am1, am2, pm1, pm2

Paper Code (PC): e.g. K1 see following pages for a full list:

Track letter: A, B, C . and paper number within track e.g. K1

Day-0: Monday 26 March 2018: 5 to 6pm, Early registration desk opens for one hour, Boarders dinner in college 7pm

Time

Day-1: Tuesday 27 March 2018  (Keynote Speaker-1 & 2 + 14 papers)

9.10 - 10.25

Tue.am1.A: (Chair: David Al-Dabass/Alessandra Orsoni): Opening session and keynote Speakers-1 : Prof Frank Wang

10.25 - 10.45

Refreshments

 

Room A

Room B

10.45 - 12.25, 5

Tue.am2.A (Chair: Alessandra Orsoni/Muhammad Akmal-U1):

A1, A2, B1, F1

Tue.am2.B (Chair: Glenn Jenkins/Mubarak Banisakher.W1):

H2, J1, S1

12.30 - 1.40

Lunch

1.45 - 3

Tue.pm1.A (Chair: David Al-Dabass /Glenn Jenkins keynote Speakers-2: Prof Qiang Shen

3 - 3.20

Refreshments

3.20 - 5, 5

Tue.pm2.A (Chair: Glenn Jenkins/Amit Singh.A1):

K1, K2, P1, T1

Tue.pm2.B (Chair: Richard Cant / Naser Zaeri.S1):

H1, R1, R2

5

Close of day-1 & photo opportunity

6 - 8.30

Dinner at own expense (Boarders dinner in college 7pm), meet at the Eagle after.

 

 

Day-2: Wednesday 28 March 2018  (Keynote-3 + 9 papers)

9.10 - 10.25

Wed.am1.A: (Chair: David Al-Dabass/Richard Cant): day-2 opening session + Keynote Speaker-3: Prof Jon Platts

10.25 - 10.45

Refreshments

10.45 - 12.25, 5

Wed.am2.A (Chair: Glenn Jenkins/ Simon Downes.X5):

Q1, Z1, Z2, Z3, Z4

Wed.am2.B (Chair: Alessandra Orsoni/ Zirak Allaf.M1):

U1, W1, Y1, Y2

12.25

Close of day-2 & photo opportunity

12.40

Lunch

2.30pm ->

Cambridge Tour. Conference Dinner 7pm, meet at the Eagle after.

 

 

 

Day-3: Thursday 29 March 2018  (Keynote-4+ 10 papers)

9.10 - 10.25

Thu.am1.A: (Chair: David Al-Dabass/Glenn Jenkins): day-3 opening session + Keynote Speaker-4: Prof Kelvin Donne

10.25 - 10.45

Refreshments

10.45 - 12.25, 5

Thu.am2.A (Chair: Alessandra Orsoni/ Jyotika Jogi.Z3):

S2, S3, S4, X1, X2

Thu.am2.B (Chair: Chair: Richard Cant/ Bushra Naeem.B1):

M1, X3, X4, X5, X6

12.25

Close of conference & photo opportunity

12.40

Lunch and depart

U1: Not day-3. S1: day-1.

Substitute-presented papers: A2.AmitSingh/A1, J1.NaserZaeri/S1, H1.ZirakQader/M1, K2.GlennJenkins-VISA? R2.ZirakQader/M1, S3.GlennJenkins, S4.AmitSingh/A1, T1.JyotikaJogi/Z3, X1.JyotikaJogi/Z3, X4.BushraNaeem/B1

 

Papers by Track ToC

 

Seq.

#

Track 01.A.Neural Networks

Status

First author

A1

1570430950

Dynamic Routing Using Inter Capsule Routing Protocol Between Capsules

Published

Amit Singh

A2

1570431970

Smart X-Ray Scanners Using Artificial Neural Networks

Published

Roger Achkar

 

 

Track 02.B.Fuzzy Systems

 

 

B1

1570419669

Reduction of the Ping-Pong Effect in Cognitive Radio Spectrum Handoffs Using Fuzzy Logic Based Inference

Published

Bushra Naeem

 

 

Track 06.F.Bioinformatics and Bioengineering

 

 

F1

1570437927

Measurement of Rater Consistency by Chance-Corrected Agreement Coefficients

Published

Zheng Xie

 

 

Track 08.H.Data and Semantic Mining

 

 

H1

1570429880

Application of Principle Component Analysis in Resolving Influential Factor Subject to Industrial Motor Failure

Published

Rosli Nurfatihah Syalwiah

H2

1570435290

Using PCA and K-Means to Predict Likeable Songs from Playlist Information

Published

Richard Cant

 

 

Track 10.J.Emergent Technologies

 

 

J1

1570433996

Optimal Machine Learning Algorithms for Cyber Threat Detection

Published

Hafiz Farooq

 

 

Track 11.K.Intelligent Systems and Applications

 

 

K1

1570429586

Use of an Intelligent Cooperative System for Travel Flow Management in an Autonomous Vehicle Network

Published

Jamal Raiyn

K2

1570434897

Binary Biogeography-Based Optimization Applied to Gene Selection for Cancer Classification Using Artificial Neural Network

Published

Dilwar Mazumder

 

 

Track 13.M.Systems Intelligence and Intelligence Systems

 

 

M1

1570434913

ConfMVM: A Hardware-Assisted Model to Confine Malicious VMs

Published

Zirak Qader

 

 

Track 16.P.Robotics, Cybernetics, Engineering, Manufacturing and Control

 

 

P1

1570431818

Software Supporting Parameter Optimization of Finite Element Models

Published

Burkhard Hensel

 

 

Track 17.Q.Methodologies, Tools and Operations Research

 

 

Q1

1570434831

Syntax Recovery for Uniface as a Domain Specific Language

Published

Majd Zohri Yafi

 

 

Track 18.R.Discrete Event and Real Time Systems

 

 

R1

1570430617

Scheduling Jobs in Multi-Grid Environment

Published

Albana Roci

R2

1570434884

Handling Global and Local Time and Energy Constraints of Sequence Diagrams

Published

Vinicius Andrade

 

 

Track 19.S.Image, Speech and Signal Processing

 

 

S1

1570419902

Hu Li Moments for Low Resolution Thermal Face Recognition

Published

Naser Zaeri

S2

1570428807

Automated Volume Analysis of Open Pit Mining Productions Based on Time Series Aerial Survey

Published

Zsolt Domozi

S3

1570432004

Random Forest Feature Selection for SAR-ATR

Published

Pouya Bolourchi

S4

1570432009

Alzheimer Detection by Utilizing Key Sliced Selection of 3D Images of MRI

Published

Masoud Moradi

 

 

Track 20.T.Industry, Business, Management, Human Factors and Social Issues

 

 

T1

1570435011

Quality Culture Management Model of Chinese Manufacturing Enterprises: A Grounded Theory Study

Published

Ying Liu

 

 

Track 21.U.Energy, Power, Transport, Logistics, Harbour, Shipping and Marine Simulation

 

 

U1

1570432696

Design and Simulation of Solar Grid-Connected Charger for Electric Vehicles Day 1 or 2

Published

Muhammad Akmal

 

 

Track W.Internet Modelling, Semantic Web and Ontologies

 

 

W1

1570434791

Security Analysis of the Workload Distribution and Resource Pooling Architecture in Cloud Systems

Published

Mubarak Banisakher

 

 

Track 24.X.Mobile/Ad hoc wireless networks, mobicast, sensor placement, target tracking

 

 

X1

1570422607

A New Two Level Cluster-based Routing Protocol for Vehicular Ad Hoc NETwork (VANET)

Published

Parisa Saraj Hamedani

X2

1570431456

Dynamic Resource Scheduling Algorithm for Public Safety Network

Published

Hyun Woo Kim

X3

1570432676

Build or Merge: Locational Decisions in Mobile Access Networks

Published

Maurizio Naldi

X4

1570432884

SDN Architecture for Intelligent Vehicular Sensors Networks

Published

Ousmane Sadio

X5

1570434621

Smart University Utilising the Concept of the Internet of Things (IOT)

Published

Simon Downes

X6

1570434893

Performance Analysis of Denial-of-Sleep Attack-Prone MAC Protocols in Wireless Sensor Networks

Published

Ekereuke Udoh

 

 

Track 25.Y.Performance Engineering of Computer & Communication Systems

 

 

Y1

1570431629

Approach to Label Distribution Protocol Signaling Using Multimedia Services for Bandwidth Allocation

Published

Oba Zubair Mustapha

Y2

1570432629

Bagging Estimation of Availability in Public Cloud Storage

Published

Maurizio Naldi

 

 

Track 26.Z.Circuits, Sensors and Devices

 

 

Z1

1570424666

Demagnetization Analysis of Mechanical Manipulation on Permanent Magnets

Published

Marcelo Ribeiro

Z2

1570429687

Mini-Computer PDP-8 ISA Simulator Design and Verification

Published

Tarek Elarabi

Z3

1570432592

Simulating Optical Behaviour of Nano Dimensional InAlAs/InGaAs HEMT for IoT Applications

Published

Jyotika Jogi

Z4

1570432659

A Mutiple Quantum Well Structure Simulator

Published

Zoubir Becer

 

 

If your paper is absent it means we have not received the publication fee and your paper will not be published.

If you intend to pay soon by credit card on EDAS (no other payment method is accepted),

email the general chair immediately on david.al-dabass@ntu.ac.uk.

Early Bird Rate ends 5pm UK time Tuesday 27 February, after that the late rate applies at $640, no student discount.

 

__Sub____= Substitute Presenter needed ____ _______ = Presentation file in EDAS

 

Seq.

#

Title

Status

First author

Presenters: names

1.B1

1570419669

Reduction of the Ping-Pong Effect in Cognitive Radio Spectrum Handoffs Using Fuzzy Logic Based Inference

Published

Bushra Naeem

Naeem

2.S1

1570419902

Hu Li Moments for Low Resolution Thermal Face Recognition

Published

Naser Zaeri

Zaeri

3.X1

1570422607

A New Two Level Cluster-based Routing Protocol for Vehicular Ad Hoc NETwork (VANET)

Published

Parisa Saraj Hamedani

Sub: Jyotika Jogi

4.Z1

1570424666

Demagnetization Analysis of Mechanical Manipulation on Permanent Magnets

Published

Marcelo Ribeiro

Ribeiro

5.S2

1570428807

Automated Volume Analysis of Open Pit Mining Productions Based on Time Series Aerial Survey

Published

Zsolt Domozi

Domozi

6.K1

1570429586

Use of an Intelligent Cooperative System for Travel Flow Management in an Autonomous Vehicle Network

Published

Jamal Raiyn

Raiyn

7.Z2

1570429687

Mini-Computer PDP-8 ISA Simulator Design and Verification

Published

Tarek Elarabi

Elarabi

8.H1

1570429880

Application of Principle Component Analysis in Resolving Influential Factor Subject to Industrial Motor Failure

Published

Rosli Nurfatihah Syalwiah

Sub: Zirak Qader

9.R1

1570430617

Scheduling Jobs in Multi-Grid Environment

Published

Albana Roci

Roci

10.A1

1570430950

Dynamic Routing Using Inter Capsule Routing Protocol Between Capsules

Published

Amit Singh

Singh

11.X2

1570431456

Dynamic Resource Scheduling Algorithm for Public Safety Network

Published

Hyun Woo Kim

Kim

12.Y1

1570431629

Approach to Label Distribution Protocol Signaling Using Multimedia Services for Bandwidth Allocation

Published

Oba Zubair Mustapha

Mustapha

13.P1

1570431818

Software Supporting Parameter Optimization of Finite Element Models

Published

Burkhard Hensel

Hensel

14.A2

1570431970

Smart X-Ray Scanners Using Artificial Neural Networks

Published

Roger Achkar

Sub: Amit Singh

15.S3

1570432004

Random Forest Feature Selection for SAR-ATR

Published

Pouya Bolourchi

Sub: Glenn Jenkins

16.S4

1570432009

Alzheimer Detection by Utilizing Key Sliced Selection of 3D Images of MRI

Published

Masoud Moradi

Sub: Amit Singh

17.Z3

1570432592

Simulating Optical Behaviour of Nano Dimensional InAlAs/InGaAs HEMT for IoT Applications

Published

Jyotika Jogi

Jogi

18.Y2

1570432629

Bagging Estimation of Availability in Public Cloud Storage

Published

Maurizio Naldi

Naldi

19.Z4

1570432659

A Multiple Quantum Well Structure Simulator

Published

Zoubir Becer

Bennecer

20.X3

1570432676

Build or Merge: Locational Decisions in Mobile Access Networks

Published

Maurizio Naldi

Naldi

21.U1

1570432696

Design and Simulation of Solar Grid-Connected Charger for Electric Vehicles

Published

Muhammad Akmal

Akmal

22.X4

1570432884

SDN Architecture for Intelligent Vehicular Sensors Networks

Published

Ousmane Sadio

Sub: Bushra Naeem

23.J1

1570433996

Optimal Machine Learning Algorithms for Cyber Threat Detection

Published

Hafiz Farooq

Sub: Naser Zaeri

24.X5

1570434621

Smart University Utilising the Concept of the Internet of Things (IOT)

Published

Simon Downes

Downes

25.W1

1570434791

Security Analysis of the Workload Distribution and Resource Pooling Architecture in Cloud Systems

Published

Mubarak Banisakher

Banisakher

26.Q1

1570434831

Syntax Recovery for Uniface as a Domain Specific Language

Published

Majd Zohri Yafi

Yafi

27.R2

1570434884

Handling Global and Local Time and Energy Constraints of Sequence Diagrams

Published

Vinicius Andrade

Sub: Zirak Qader

28.X6

1570434893

Performance Analysis of Denial-of-Sleep Attack-Prone MAC Protocols in Wireless Sensor Networks

Published

Ekereuke Udoh

Udoh

29.K2

1570434897

Binary Biogeography-Based Optimization Applied to Gene Selection for Cancer Classification Using Artificial Neural Network

Published

Dilwar Mazumder

Mazumder Visa/Glenn Jenkins?

30.M1

1570434913

ConfMVM: A Hardware-Assisted Model to Confine Malicious VMs

Published

Zirak Qader

Qader

31.T1

1570435011

Quality Culture Management Model of Chinese Manufacturing Enterprises: A Grounded Theory Study

Published

Ying Liu

Sub: Jyotika Jogi

32.H2

1570435290

Using PCA and K-Means to Predict Likeable Songs from Playlist Information

Published

Richard Cant

Cant

33.F1

1570437927

Measurement of Rater Consistency by Chance-Corrected Agreement Coefficients

Published

Zheng Xie

Xie

 

 

Authors of papers with top review scores of 0.8 and 0.9

0.8: H2, S2, X3, Z1. 0.9: F1

H2, 1570435290, Using PCA and K-Means to Predict Likeable Songs from Playlist Information, Richard Cant

S2, 1570428807, Automated Volume Analysis of Open Pit Mining Productions Based on Time Series Aerial Survey, Zsolt Domozi

X3, 1570432676, Build or Merge: Locational Decisions in Mobile Access Networks, Maurizio Naldi

Z1, 1570424666, Demagnetization Analysis of Mechanical Manipulation on Permanent Magnets, Marcelo Ribeiro

F1, 1570437927, Measurement of Rater Consistency by Chance-Corrected Agreement Coefficients, Zheng Xie

 

Are invited to submit an extended version to IJSSST

Congratulations, here are the steps:

 

1. Extend the paper by at least one page over the conference paper, up to a maximum of 20 pages

2. Amend the title, abstract section and conclusions to reflect the additional material

3. Submit the new version to IJSSST-V19 Issue No. 3 using EDAS, by the end of May 2018.

4. Inform the general chair on david.al-dabass@ntu.ac.uk

+.+

Keynote Speaker-1

Brain and Brain-Inspired Artificial Intelligence
 
Prof Frank Wang
 
Head of School of Computing, University of Kent
Canterbury, UK
Chair, IEEE Computer Society, UKRI Chapter
Email: frankwang@ieee.org
 
Abstract
 
Deep learning was inspired by the 1981 Nobel Prize work by David H. Hubel & Torsten Wiesel, who found a cascading model in the human brain. We are building a computer that works similarly to the human brain and could be useful for modern simulation and modelling. Most of previous efforts to build brain-like computers have failed because it took about the same silicon area to emulate a CMOS synapse as that needed to emulate a neuron. In theory, any realistic implementation of a synapse should ideally be at least four orders of magnitude smaller than that required to build a neuron. The invention of the memristor opens a new way to implement synapses. A memristor is a simple 2-terminal element, which means a vast number of memristors could be integrated together with other CMOS elements, in a brain-like machine.

 

Biography


Frank Z. Wang is the Professor in Future Computing and Head of School of Computing (2010-2016), University of Kent, the UK. The School of Computing was formally opened by Her Majesty the Queen. His led school achieved an amazing result in the 2014 UK government REF (Research Excellence Framework): the research intensity was ranked 12th out of over 150 computing departments in the UK. Professor Wang's research interests include brain-like computer, memristor theory and applications, deep learning, cloud computing, big data, and green computing, etc. He has been invited to deliver keynote speeches and invited talks to report his research worldwide, for example at Princeton University, Carnegie Mellon University, CERN, Hong Kong University of Sci. & Tech., Tsinghua University (Taiwan), Jawaharlal Nehru University, Sydney University of Technology, and University of Johannesburg. In 2004, he was appointed as Chair & Professor, Director of Centre for Grid Computing at CCHPCF (Cambridge-Cranfield High Performance Computing Facility). CCHPCF is a collaborative research facility in the Universities of Cambridge and Cranfield (with an investment size of Sterling 40 million). Prof Wang and his team have won an ACM/IEEE Super Computing finalist award. Prof Wang is Chairman (UK & Republic of Ireland Chapter) of the IEEE Computer Society and Fellow of British Computer Society.

 

Keynote Speaker-2

Lessons Learnt in Delivering Complex, Science Based, Large-Scale Synthetic Environment Trials

 

 

Professor Jon Platts

 

Dean, Cardiff School of Technologies
Cardiff Metropolitan University
Cardiff

Email: jplatts@cardiffmet.ac.uk

 

Abstract

This talk will discuss personal recollections and lessons identified during an intensive period of research involving the use of Synthetic Environments to deliver actionable research output. The research took place between 2010 and 2013 whilst the author was leading the technical teams involved in autonomous systems research within QinetiQ. Four trials were executed at 6 monthly intervals.

The research work was focussed on how best to introduce automation and autonomy to formations of both manned and unmanned air systems to deliver significant additional capabilities. Studies indicated that cloud based concepts would provide benefits by maximising the availability of capability, reducing redundancy and permitting efficiencies in operation and deployment of effect. This work examined automation applied to the cloud and built on substantial work looking at command abstraction of users and consumers interacting with systems. The work retained the absolute authority of the human supervisor. Data was gathered through Synthetic Environment based trials which immersed serving military personnel, exercising both manned and unmanned systems, whilst divorcing the operators from platform ownership allowing them to concentrate instead on task ownership. Within the synthetic environment, baseline systems were compared with systems possessing higher degrees of automation and tool functionality. In a nutshell: candidate technologies were developed for real-time execution and analysis in a militarily realistic scenario with military operators.

The talk will explain the setup of the trial and describe the interplay and conflicting requirements running across parallel swim lanes as the teams involved (for example, military scenario planning, candidate technology development, synthetic environment development, hypothesis development and analysis), developed the trial to meet aggressive deadlines.

 

Biography

 

A person wearing a white shirt and smiling at the camera

Description generated with very high confidenceJon T Platts is currently the Dean of the Cardiff School of Technologies at Cardiff Metropolitan University and Professor of Autonomous Systems.

Jon recently took up this role following careers in the Royal Air Force and industry research and development. He has had commercial success with his own company Muretex, winning significant, nationally competed, research grant funding,- most recently in the latest round of Innovate UK funding for Robotics and Autonomous Systems. He has international contacts and reach, having proposed and chaired 2 European research action groups over 8 years; been invited to deliver a NATO lecture series on autonomy. Jon was the Head of Autonomy for QinetiQ for 13 years, shaping the direction of research programmes and co-ordinating multi-organisation teams (from QinetiQ, Dstl, BAE Systems, Thales UK, the Military and Academia) and multi-disciplinary teams, the output being to design and deliver large scale research (both flight and synthetic) trials. Highlights include a flight trial over Dartmoor where a single seat fast jet pilot controlled 4 drones (1 live, 3 synthetic) on an attack mission using high levels of autonomy and leading QinetiQs autonomous systems offering into the UKs Taranis stealthy Unmanned Combat Air System demonstrator.

In his current role Jon will lead the ambitious multi-million pound Cardiff School of Technologies launch and development, to further establish Cardiff Metropolitan University as a world leader within the tech industry. The School plans to recruit 2,000 new students by 2024, aligned to the employment needs of South Wales' growing tech sector and will partner with technology-focused companies across the Cardiff Capital Region to support their growth plans with students work ready in areas such as data science, cyber security, mobile computing, artificial intelligence and systems engineering.

Jon holds a BEng in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from the University of Bradford, an MSc in Aerosystems Engineering from Loughborough University and a PhD in Self organising fuzzy logic from Loughborough University. He is a Fellow of the Institution of Engineering and Technology and a member of both the Institution of Measurement and Control and the International Council on Systems Engineering.

 

Keynote Speaker-3

Feature Selection in Systems Modelling with Imprecise Data

 

Prof Qiang Shen

 

Director, Institute of Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science

Aberystwyth University, Wales, UK.

Email: qqs@aber.ac.uk

 

 

Abstract

 

Feature selection (FS) addresses the problem of selecting those system descriptors that are most predictive of a given outcome. Unlike other dimensionality reduction methods, with FS the original meaning of the features is preserved. This has found application in tasks that involve datasets containing very large numbers of features that might otherwise be impractical to model and process (e.g., large-scale image analysis, text processing and Web content classification), where feature semantics play an important role. This talk will focus on the development and application of approximate FS mechanisms based on rough and fuzzy-rough theories. Such techniques provide a means by which imprecisely described data can be effectively reduced without the need for user-supplied information. In particular, Fuzzy-Rough Feature Selection (FRFS) works with discrete and real-valued noisy data (or a mixture of both). As such, it is suitable for regression as well as for classification. The only additional information required is the fuzzy partition for each feature, which can be automatically derived from the data. FRFS has been shown to be a powerful technique for semantics-preserving data dimensionality reduction. In introducing the general background of FS, this talk will first cover the rough-set-based approach, before focusing on FRFS and its application to real-world problems. The talk will conclude with an outline of opportunities for further development.

 

Biography


Professor Qiang Shen received a PhD in Knowledge-Based Systems and a DSc in Computational Intelligence. He holds the Established Chair of Computer Science and is Director of the Institute of Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science at Aberystwyth University. He is a Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales and was a UK Research Excellence Framework (2008-2014) panel member for Computer Science and Informatics. He has been a long-serving Associate Editor or Editorial Board member of many leading international journals (e.g. IEEE Transactions on Cybernetics and IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems), and has chaired and given keynotes at numerous international conferences. Professor Shen current research interests include: computational intelligence, learning and reasoning under uncertainty, pattern recognition, data modelling and analysis, and their applications for intelligent decision support (e.g., space exploration, crime detection, consumer profiling, systems monitoring, and medical diagnosis). He has authored 2 research monographs and approximately 370 peer-reviewed papers, including an award-winning IEEE Outstanding Transactions paper. He has served as the first supervisor of 55 PDRAs/PhDs, including one UK Distinguished Dissertation Award winner.

 

 

Keynote Speaker-4

Cross Disciplinary Simulation Studies

 

Prof Kelvin Donne

 

University of Wales Trinity Saint David

Swansea Campus, Mount Pleasant

Swansea SA1 6ED

kelvin.donne@uwtsd.ac.uk

 

 

We discuss the results of Computer Simulation work undertaken across a diverse range of disciplines, from underpinning numerical analysis in the Boundary Element Method through to computational modelling in ballistics and Product Design.

 

Computational Modelling of projectile impact onto laminated glazing: we consider the impact of small fragments onto laminated glass windows, which could be either architectural or automotive. We review the physics involved, then discuss simulation studies of a number of situations, including:

- The initial impact event creating a localised chip: computational work using an explicit time-dependent finite element model will be presented.

- The subsequent chip to full crack-off: in the case of automotive glazing, this would mean replacing the whole windscreen rather than a localised repair.

- Thermo-structural analysis of windscreens in extreme environments.

The presentation will consider material models for brittle materials, strain-rate dependency and damage models commonly used in these type of analyses.

The simulation work is informed by experimental ballistic work and some high speed videos will be shown illustrating how these can help in the qualitative interpretation of the simulation work.

The presentation will also emphasise the issues concerned with short deadlines for simulation work sponsored by industry and how results need to be presented for non-technical audience.

 

Mitigation of the Singularity problem in the Time-Dependent Boundary Element Method: The Time dependent BEM is a relatively obscure technique for solving transient thermal diffusion problems. This presentation will describe recent results showing the power of this method in the context of light-tissue interaction, including benchmarking against analytical solutions. In particular, the well-known singularity problem with algorithms based around Green functions will be discussed along with mitigation strategies. A practical application of the TDBEM will be presented, illustrating the convergence challenge for medical device modelling [1, 2].

 

Usability Analysis for Product Design Evaluation: Early work in usability analysis for expert system evaluation in our research group has led to an opportunity to diffuse this method into the assessment of new product design and development, where quantitative methods have been relatively underexploited or indeed avoided compared to qualitative techniques. Two case studies are presented to illustrate the power of statistically rigorous usability analysis, where Thurstones method [3, 4] of pairwise comparisons is used in conjunction with a set of design factors to assess new product concepts.

- Design of action furniture: The case study will discuss the process of product deconstruction leading to design factors that serve as criteria to assess different design solutions for both manual and powered reclining furniture, by a UK based company seeking to achieve a competitive edge. The case study will show the conjunction of this Psychophysics approach along with more conventional fatigue analysis.

- Different forms of representing a new glass sculptural concept at an early stage of the product development cycle will be assessed, including sketching, Gouraud shading, photorealistic rendering , mono and stereo [5,6]. This second case study, Thurstones method of pair-wise comparisons,- originally proposed as a quantitative approach for aesthetic judgment, is applied to assess how different representational modes from paper sketching through to stereoscopic virtual images perform in conveying the design intent. This analysis will be applied to three different glass design concepts.

 

References

1. Donne K E, Bashford T & Marotin A: Solution of the Transient Thermal Diffusion equation using the Boundary Element Method, Int. J. Comp. Meth. and Exp. Meas., Vol. 5, No. 3 (2017) 260 - 270. DOI: 10.2495/CMEM-V5-N3-260 - 270. Presented at the 39th International Conference on Boundary Element Methods, Siena , Italy, September 2016

2. Bashford T, Donne K E, Marotin A & Al-Hussany A. Parallelisation techniques for the Dual Reciprocity and Time-Dependent Boundary Element Method algorithms, Int. J. Comp. Meth. and Exp. Meas., Vol. 5, No. 3 (2017) 395 - 403. DOI: 10.2495/CMEM-V5-N3-395-403. Presented at the 39th International Conference on Boundary Element Methods, Siena, Italy, September 2016

3. Thurstone LL, A Law of Comparative Judgment, Psychological Review Vol 101, No 2, pp 266-270, (1994).

4. Gescheider G A, PsychoPhysics Method: Theory and Application, 2nd Edn [Lawrence Erlabum Associates], (1985).

5. Donne K E, Head R, A quality metric for glass artefact prototypes, 6th International Conference Quality Reliability Maintenance, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, UK, 2007.

6. Head R, Donne K E, Bender R, Brown RDH (June 2005) Digital Design Methodology for Glass Design & Manufacture 9th International Conference on Architectural & Automotive Glass, Tampere, Finland.

 

Biography

 

Kelvin Donne is now Professorial Fellow at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David and was previously Faculty Dean and Associate Pro Vice Chancellor. He has published over 70 papers and has supervised over 20 PhD students mainly in the area of computational physics. His main areas of research are tissue photonics and automotive glass fracture.

 

 

 

Counter 1