The 3rd ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Built Environments (BuildSys 2016) will host a highly selective, single-track forum for research on systems issues covering all aspects of the built environment, broadly defined.
Advances in the effective integration of networked sensors, building controls, and physical infrastructure are transforming our society, allowing the formation of unprecedented built environments and interlocking physical, social, cyber challenges. Moreover, built environments, including buildings and critical urban infrastructure, account for over half of society's energy consumption and are the mainstay of our nation’s economy, security and health. As a result, there is a broad recognition that systems optimizing explicitly for the built environment are particularly important in improving our society, and represent the foundation for emerging "smart cities".
BuildSys is an ideal venue for researchers and practitioners working to develop and optimize such smart infrastructure systems that are driven by networked sensing, computing, and control functions.
The 3rd ACM International Conference on Systems for Energy-Efficient Built Environments (BuildSys 2016) will host a highly selective, single-track forum for research on systems issues covering all aspects of the built environment, broadly defined.
Advances in the effective integration of networked sensors, building controls, and physical infrastructure are transforming our society, allowing the formation of unprecedented built environments and interlocking physical, social, cyber challenges. Moreover, built environments, including buildings and critical urban infrastructure, account for over half of society's energy consumption and are the mainstay of our nation’s economy, security and health. As a result, there is a broad recognition that systems optimizing explicitly for the built environment are particularly important in improving our society, and represent the foundation for emerging "smart cities".
BuildSys is an ideal venue for researchers and practitioners working to develop and optimize such smart infrastructure systems that are driven by networked sensing, computing, and control functions.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:
Sensing and control systems for managing urban infrastructure systems, such as water supply and distribution networks, wastewater treatment systems, electrical grids, transportation networks, etc.
Sensing, actuation and management of electrical loads in residential, commercial and industrial settings
Novel sensor methodologies, sensor networks and applications that enhance energy efficiency, energy reliability, durability and occupant comfort
Systems that integrate infrastructure with the emerging smart grid to provide demand response and ancillary services and/or manage utility costs
Modeling, simulation, optimization, and control of heating, cooling, lighting, ventilation, water usage and other energy flows in built environments
Distributed generation, alternative energy, renewable sources, and energy storage in buildings
Emerging communication standards for data collection, energy control, or interoperation of disparate devices or systems
Human in the loop sensing and control for efficient usage of electricity, gas, heating, water
New sociotechnical systems for innovative applications and services to enable more livable, workable, sustainable, and connected communities;
Localization and contextual computing for increased human-infrastructure interactions;
Security and Privacy issues for the built environments;
Optimizations interconnected and interdependent systems-of-systems, such as water, energy, or transportation systems;
11月06日
2016
11月07日
2016
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