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History

The Cyber-Physical Systems Integration Laboratory was formerly known as Real-Time and Embedded System Laboratory established by Professors David C. L. Liu and Jane W. S. Liu. Professor Jane Liu is the pioneer of Imprecise (approximate) Real-TIme Computing Algorithms. This method is increasingly influential in soft real-time applications such as those used in the transmission of video over wireless networks.

Modern real-time scheduling theory was started by Professor David Liu at UIUC with his seminal paper Scheduling Algorithms for Multiprogramming in a Hard Real-Time Environment. Built upon this pioneering work, Professor Lui Sha and his collaborators created the modern real-time scheduling theory that transformed real-time computing standards and impacted many national high-technology projects.

Profess David Liu is the pioneer of real-time system schedulability analysis. His paper on real-time scheduling, Scheduling Algorithms for Multiprogramming in A Hard Real-Time Environment, has over 10000 citations. He also led the transformation from ad hoc EDA to algorithmic EDA. He was an early advocate for more rigorous design automation, arguing that powerful, formal algorithmic techniques were essential to the effective solution of complex design automation problems. His technical contributions are at the foundation of a multitude of current EDA tools within several disciplines, including behavioral synthesis, logic synthesis, and physical design. He received the Phil Kaufman Award in 2011. After Professors David Liu’s and Jane Liu’s retirement, Professor Lui Sha became the Director of the Laboratory in 1998.

Modern real-time scheduling theory was started by Professor David Liu at UIUC with his seminal paper Scheduling Algorithms for Multiprogramming in a Hard Real-Time Environment. Built upon this pioneering work, Professor Lui Sha and his collaborators created the modern real-time scheduling theory that transformed the real-time computing standards and impacted many national high technology projects.

Research Impact

  • Global Positioning Satellite: “The navigation payload software for the next block of Global Positioning System upgrades recently completed testing. … This design would have been difficult or impossible prior to the development of rate monotonic theory”, L. Doyle, and J. Elzey “Successful Use of Rate Monotonic Theory on A Formidable Real-Time System, technical report, p.1, ITT, Aerospace Communication Division, 1993. International Space Station: “Through the development of Rate Monotonic Scheduling, we now have a system that will allow [Space Station] Freedom’s computers to budget their time, to choose between a variety of tasks, and decide not only which one to do first but how much time to spend in the process”, Aaron Cohen, Deputy Administrator of NASA, October 1992 (p. 3), Charting The Future: Challenges and Promises Ahead of Space Exploration.
  • International Space Station: “Dear Dr. Sha, I hope this finds you doing well. I frequently recall your efforts on everyone’s behalf in convincing IBM on RMS principles for the Space Station Software…It has been a very exciting 5 years since the reconstruction of the Station from Freedom to its present configuration International Space Station.” ISS C&DH Architecture and Software Manager, David Pruett, NASA Johnson Space Center, January 19, 2001.
  • Mars Pathfinder: (Rescuing Mars Pathfinder when its software repeatedly crashed on Mars due to real-time computing problems) “When was the last time you saw a room of people cheer a group of computer science theorists for their significant practical contribution to advancing human knowledge? 🙂 It was quite a moment. … For the record, the paper was L. Sha, R. Rajkumar, and J. P. Lehoczky. Priority Inheritance Protocols: An Approach to Real-Time Synchronization. In IEEE Transactions on Computers, vol. 39, pp. 1175-1185, Sep. 1990.” reported by Dr. Michael Jones of Microsoft Research.
  • Digital Avionics: National Academy of Science’s Committee on Certifiably Dependable Systems wrote, “One key to achieving dependability at a reasonable cost is a serious and sustained commitment to simplicity, including simplicity of critical functions and simplicity in system interactions. This commitment is often the mark of true expertise. There is no alternative to simplicity. Advances in technology or development methods will not make simplicity redundant; on the contrary, they will give it greater leverage”. A notable invention of our team in this area is the Physically Asynchronous Logically Synchronous (PALS) architecture. Rockwell Collins Inc has shown in their lab that using PALS, the verification time using model checking time for a dual redundant flight control system has reduced from 35 hours to less than 30 seconds, winning the 2009 David Lubkowski Memorial Award for the Advancement of Digital Avionics from American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA). Running on top of PALS middleware, engineers can design, verify and run a networked (single-core) real-time control system as if it were a single computer at the fastest possible speed permitted by the platform.

Current Research

  • New Physics Model Guided Machine Learning:  A physics model is a validated low-dimensional model of causality with critical properties such as provable stability in control applications. DNN is a high-dimensional model of correlations that may capture not only unmodeled dynamics overlooked by physics model but also spurious corrections in the training samples (overfitting). As a result, while DNN has statistically significant performance improvement, but it may also generate outputs inconsistent with the laws of physics that could lead to catastrophic failures. Physics Model Edited DNN combines the best of the physical model and DNN model. Traditionally, we project a higher dimensional space to a lower dimension space for computational efficiency at the cost of performance. Physics model-based neuron editing turns this conventional projection approach upside down. We project a lower dimensional physics model onto a higher dimensional DNN model by 1) augmenting the input feature vector with physic variables and 2) removing relations permitted by DNN but contradicting the laws physics. The physics model edited DNN is constrained by physical laws. We gain control-performance at the cost of computing.  To ensure stability of control in spite of DNN software failures, we use Simplex architecture to ensure that the states under the control of the edited DNN must remain within the stability envelope of the physical model-based control.
  • Positions Available:  One Postdoc and part-time jobs in the lab: software development and/or hardware devices for research.
  • Pediatric Sepsis Guidance System in cooperation with OSF Children’s Hospital of  Illinois
    1. Assist clinicians with early detection of pediatric sepsis by providing real-time assistance with clinical management of pediatric sepsis
    2. Facilitate the continued assessment of septic children while providing feedback on the next steps in management
    3. Improve adherence to accepted practice guidelines for the management of pediatric sepsis
    4. Achieve early vascular access and timely fluid administration
    5. Improve rates of antibiotic administration within 60 minutes of presentation
    6. Serve as a resource to teach less experienced clinicians and clinicians-in-training important tenants of pediatric sepsis management
  • OSF IRB has approved our Pediatric Sepsis Guidance for clinical evaluation.  Here is the link to two demonstration videos.

News

2021Lui Sha honored with David Lubkowski Award for the Advancement of Digital Avionics at AIAA.
2020IEEE Real-Time Systems Symposium (RTSS) Influential Paper Award
2020IEEE Technical Committee on Real-Time Systems Test of Time and Influential Paper Awards
2018The Tau Beta Pi Daniel C. Drucker Eminent Faculty Award
2016Lui Sha awarded IEEE Simon Ramo Medal
2015Appointed by NASA Administrator Bolden to NASA Advisory Council’s Aeronautic Committee, assisting NASA in the formulation of her research programs, 2015 to 2017
2005Member of National Academy of Science’s Committee on Certifiably Dependable Software Systems, 2005 to 2007. See National Academy’s Report on Dependable Software Systems.
2005Lui Sha recognized as Fellow of the ACMfor contributions to real-time systems.”
2001Lui Sha honored with Outstanding Technical Contributions and Leadership Award by IEEE Technical Committee on Real-Time Systems.
1998Lui Sha recognized as Fellow of the IEEEfor technical leadership and research contributions which enabled the transformation of real-time computing practice from an ad hoc process to an engineering process based on analytic methods.”