[PDF] Top 20 Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... an interactive command prompt with a read-eval-print loop that allows developers to enter commands and ex- ecute PVS specifications ...prototyping interactive systems: a list of nested commands must ... See full document
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... on formal refinement for interface design had di ff erent foci to our ...the formal refinement process may be achieved through a set of ...control systems, using ... See full document
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... The IVY tool uses Modal Action Logic (MAL) to specify the effect of actions on state at- tributes, given preconditions. The MAL is translated into SMV to be analysed using NuSMV [CCG + 02]. The models were checked ... See full document
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... While the above models aim primarily to driver behaviour prediction for accident preven- tion, some recent models also investigate behavioural adaptation to be considered in the human- centered design of Intelligent ... See full document
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... evaluating interactive systems formally described using ICO models through exhaustive analysis, applying an approach based on property ...post-WIMP interactive techniques were analyzed demonstrating ... See full document
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Volume 69: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2013
... of interactive systems by a lightweight use of formal meth- ...ods. Formal models guide the development of the underdesigned evolutionary pro- ...design, formal modeling, design ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... the destination along with a marked route from their current location to that destination. The prototypes for the GUI of this example are given in Figure 1. The intention is that once the prototypes have been developed ... See full document
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Volume 22: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2009
... of interactive systems is a difficult ...the interactive behaviour of the system and that the user interface (UI) is usable and aesthetically acceptable for ...on systems which have already ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... If we check the conjunction of the above properties on the four systems defined in Section 3.2.2 we find out that it holds only for AT MsInteraction(2,2). This is the case of an ATM returning the card first and a ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... The GUM is intended to predict only errors that are systematic, i.e. errors that have some underlying cognitive cause, and are not random, one-off errors. Furthermore the model is an abstraction of the actual underlying ... See full document
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Volume 22: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2009
... Our vision is illustrated in Figure 1, where ellipses denote agents and rectangles objects. The key feature of our vision is that modelling is tightly coupled with system development and con- figuration. This is not a ... See full document
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Volume 22: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2009
... the formal methods and critical-systems develop- ment community, as it leads to an automatic analysis of some subtle properties of complex ... See full document
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Volume 22: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2009
... the formal verification of finite state ...state systems and/or verify properties of such systems, which have been specified hierarchically as a collection of interacting finite state ... See full document
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Volume 22: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2009
... the formal relations between ...the formal relations between emotion and trust laid bare by the logical framework were subjected to a behavioral validation following the methods of experimental ... See full document
16
Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... There is, in fact, a very strong and sound new method for analysis of hybrid systems based on relational abstractions of this type [ST11]. The difference between that approach and ours is that sound relational ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... Augmentation Systems (SBAS) depends on many different forms of evidence, including but not limited to risk assessments, architectural descriptions, develop- ment standards, test data, independent audits ...FMECA, ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... check the current rate value on the display and update their belief, increasing it by the assumed delta value (mrate 0 = rate +mDelta). Alternatively, it may rely on the rate believed to be current and increase it ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... Our regex notation clearly distinguishes between four sorts of symbols: variables, operators, literals, and comments. White space (outside of literal strings) is ignored, except for separating adjacent variable names. ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... Nurses are usually interrupted while they carry out their tasks. There is empirical evidence that interruptions have a disruptive impact on people’s performance and reliability [TM07] that must be taken into account when ... See full document
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Volume 45: Formal Methods for Interactive Systems 2011
... The systematic analysis of properties of interactive behaviour using Modal Action Logic (MAL) and the IVY tool has been reported in previous papers [CH08, CH09]. This paper focuses on the modelling and analysis of ... See full document
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