Vanderbilt researchers get top honors at cyber-physical systems conference
Vanderbilt researchers earned major accolades at the 16th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems (ICCPS), held May 6–9 in Irvine, California. They won Best Paper, Best Artifact, and Best Poster awards.
Best Paper: Jonathan Sprinkle and Dan Work, with Ph.D. graduates George Gunter and Matthew Nice, explored the safety of control barrier functions in automated vehicles.
Best Artifact: Tianshu Bao and Meiyi Ma demonstrated reproducibility in traffic modeling using physics-informed graph networks.
Best Poster: Rishav Sen presented work on adaptive energy optimization for electric mobility.
All recipients are affiliated with Vanderbilt’s Institute for Software Integrated Systems, a leader in cyber-physical systems research.
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The conference is sponsored by ACM SIGBED, MathWorks, and Toyota. Last year, Vanderbilt’s Abhishek Dubey also won Best Paper at ICCPS for work on Nashville's public transit system.