Team, Visitors, External Collaborators
Overall Objectives
Research Program
Application Domains
Highlights of the Year
New Software and Platforms
New Results
Bilateral Contracts and Grants with Industry
Partnerships and Cooperations
Dissemination
Bibliography
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Section: Partnerships and Cooperations

National Initiatives

ANR TickTac: Efficient Techniques for Verification and Synthesis of Real-Time Systems (2019-2023)

The aim of TickTac is to develop novel algorithms for the verification and synthesis of real-time systems using the timed automata formalism. One of the project's objectives is to develop an open-source and configurable model checker which will allow the community to compare algorithms. The algorithms and the tool will be used on a motion planning case study for robotics.

ANR HeadWork: Human-Centric Data-oriented WORKflows (2016-2020)

The objective of this project is to develop techniques to facilite development, deployment, and monitoring of crowd-based participative applications. This requires handling complex workflows with multiple participants, incertainty in data collections, incentives, skills of contributors, ... To overcome these challenges, Headwork will define rich workflows with multiple participants, data and knowledge models to capture various kind of crowd applications with complex data acquisition tasks and human specificities. We will also address methods for deploying, verifying, optimizing, but also monitoring and adapting crowd-based workflow executions at run time.

IPL HAC-SPECIS: High-performance Application and Computers, Studying PErformance and Correctness In Simulation (2016-2020)

The Inria Project Lab HAC-SPECIS (High-performance Application and Computers, Studying PErformance and Correctness In Simulation, is a transversal project internal to Inria. The goal of the HAC SPECIS project is to answer the methodological needs raised by the recent evolution of HPC architectures by allowing application and runtime developers to study such systems both from the correctness and performance point of view. Inside this project, we collaborate with Martin Quinson (Myriads team) on the dynamic formal verification of high performance runtimes and applications. The PhD of The Anh Pham is granted by this project.

This year we have been mainly interested in the extension of the SimGrid programming model of MPI with synchronization primitives, the formalisation in ATL, of this model, and its adaptation to dynamic partial-order-reduction methods (DPOR) that allow to reduce the explored state space. A prototype implementation of an existing method that combines DPOR with true-concurrency models has been experimented on toy examples. The Anh Pham completed his PhD in december 2019.

National informal collaborations

The team collaborates with the following researchers: