Lero (The Irish Software Research Ctr)
Lero (The Irish Software Research Ctr)
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2024Partners:Cisco Systems (United Kingdom), Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qatar University, NATS Ltd, Agile Business Consortium Limited +34 partnersCisco Systems (United Kingdom),Chinese Academy of Sciences,Qatar University,NATS Ltd,Agile Business Consortium Limited,Milton Keynes Hospital,The Open University,Government of the United Kingdom,RAND EUROPE COMMUNITY INTEREST COMPANY,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Agile Business Consortium Limited,Chainvine Ltd,Government office for science,Milton Keynes Council,Thames Valley Police,OU,Federal University of Pernambuco,Software Sustainability Institute,Cisco Systems (United Kingdom),Gwent Police,CAS,National Air Traffic Services (United Kingdom),RAND Europe,Milton Keynes Hospital,University of Notre Dame Indiana,Government Office for Science,Gwent Police,NII,Federal University of Pernambuco,Chainvine Ltd,University of Notre Dame,Lero,Software Sustainability Institute,Qatar University,Cisco Systems UK,Milton Keynes Council,Thames Valley Police,Lero (The Irish Software Research Ctr),National Institute of InformaticsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/R013144/1Funder Contribution: 1,330,880 GBPIn the last decade, the role of software engineering has changed rapidly and radically. Globalisation and mobility of people and services, pervasive computing, and ubiquitous connectivity through the Internet have disrupted traditional software engineering boundaries and practices. People and services are no longer bound by physical locations. Computational devices are no longer bound to the devices that host them. Communication, in its broadest sense, is no longer bounded in time or place. The Software Engineering & Design (SEAD) group at the Open University (OU) is leading software engineering research in this new reality that requires a paradigm shift in the way software is developed and used. This platform grant will grow and sustain strategic, multi-disciplinary, crosscutting research activities that underpin the advances in software engineering required to build the pervasive and ubiquitous computing systems that will be tightly woven into the fabric of a complex and changing socio-technical world. In addition to sustaining and growing the SEAD group at the OU and supporting its continued collaboration with the Social Psychology research group at the University of Exeter, the SAUSE platform will also enable the group to have lasting impact across several application domains such as healthcare, aviation, policing, and sustainability. The grant will allow the team to enhance the existing partner networks in these areas and to develop impact pathways for their research, going beyond the scope and lifetime of individual research projects.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2024Partners:Health & Social Care Information Centre, Lancashire and South Cumbira NHS Trust, Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, National Institute of Informatics, UWA +75 partnersHealth & Social Care Information Centre,Lancashire and South Cumbira NHS Trust,Defence Science and Technology Laboratory,National Institute of Informatics,UWA,TechnipFMC (France),Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre,CRODA EUROPE LIMITED,Lero (The Irish Software Research Ctr),ADVANCED MANUFACTURING RESEARCH CENTRE,Connected Places Catapult,Shadow Robot Company Ltd,Chartered Inst of Ergo & Human Factors,Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,TechnipFMC (International),GoSouthCoast,THALES UK LIMITED,Croda (United Kingdom),Ocado Technology,Autonomous Drivers Alliance,Sheffield Childrens NHS Foundation Trust,UCF,CLAWAR Ltd,University of York,Milton Keynes Hospital,DHSC,Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre,Bristol Robotics Laboratory,Thales UK Limited,Consequential Robotics Ltd,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,National Institute of Informatics,Thales (United Kingdom),Consequential Robotics (to be replaced),RAC Foundation,CRODA EUROPE LTD,Kompai Robotics,Resilient Cyber Security Solutions,Milton Keynes Hospital,Ocado Technology,Cyberselves Universal Limited,Robert Bosch (Germany),Lero,GoSouthCoast,Resilient Cyber Security Solutions,Shadow Robot (United Kingdom),University of York,ClearSy,RAC Foundation for Motoring,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Cyberselves Universal Limited,ClearSy,Bradford Teaching Hospitals,IAM RoadSmart,University of Central Florida,NHS Digital,Public Health England,Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust,KUKA (United Kingdom),ATACC group,Connected Places Catapult,IAM RoadSmart,Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust,Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Bristol Robotics Laboratory,ATACC group,PHE,Lancashire & South Cumbria NHS Fdn Trust,Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,CLAWAR Ltd,Bradford Teaching Hospitals,Robert Bosch (Germany),National Institute of Informatics,Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust,University of Western Australia,Kompai Robotics,Autonomous Drivers AllianceFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026747/1Funder Contribution: 3,063,680 GBPImagine a future where autonomous systems are widely available to improve our lives. In this future, autonomous robots unobtrusively maintain the infrastructure of our cities, and support people in living fulfilled independent lives. In this future, autonomous software reliably diagnoses disease at early stages, and dependably manages our road traffic to maximise flow and minimise environmental impact. Before this vision becomes reality, several major limitations of current autonomous systems need to be addressed. Key among these limitations is their reduced resilience: today's autonomous systems cannot avoid, withstand, recover from, adapt, and evolve to handle the uncertainty, change, faults, failure, adversity, and other disruptions present in such applications. Recent and forthcoming technological advances will provide autonomous systems with many of the sensors, actuators and other functional building blocks required to achieve the desired resilience levels, but this is not enough. To be resilient and trustworthy in these important applications, future autonomous systems will also need to use these building blocks effectively, so that they achieve complex technical requirements without violating our social, legal, ethical, empathy and cultural (SLEEC) rules and norms. Additionally, they will need to provide us with compelling evidence that the decisions and actions supporting their resilience satisfy both technical and SLEEC-compliance goals. To address these challenging needs, our project will develop a comprehensive toolbox of mathematically based notations and models, SLEEC-compliant resilience-enhancing methods, and systematic approaches for developing, deploying, optimising, and assuring highly resilient autonomous systems and systems of systems. To this end, we will capture the multidisciplinary nature of the social and technical aspects of the environment in which autonomous systems operate - and of the systems themselves - via mathematical models. For that, we have a team of Computer Scientists, Engineers, Psychologists, Philosophers, Lawyers, and Mathematicians, with an extensive track record of delivering research in all areas of the project. Working with such a mathematical model, autonomous systems will determine which resilience- enhancing actions are feasible, meet technical requirements, and are compliant with the relevant SLEEC rules and norms. Like humans, our autonomous systems will be able to reduce uncertainty, and to predict, detect and respond to change, faults, failures and adversity, proactively and efficiently. Like humans, if needed, our autonomous systems will share knowledge and services with humans and other autonomous agents. Like humans, if needed, our autonomous systems will cooperate with one another and with humans, and will proactively seek assistance from experts. Our work will deliver a step change in developing resilient autonomous systems and systems of systems. Developers will have notations and guidance to specify the socio-technical norms and rules applicable to the operational context of their autonomous systems, and techniques to design resilient autonomous systems that are trustworthy and compliant with these norms and rules. Additionally, developers will have guidance to build autonomous systems that can tolerate disruption, making the system usable in a larger set of circumstances. Finally, they will have techniques to develop resilient autonomous systems that can share information and services with peer systems and humans, and methods for providing evidence of the resilience of their systems. In such a context, autonomous systems and systems of systems will be highly resilient and trustworthy.
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