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ASDEN: a comprehensive design framework vision for automotive electronic control systems
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Source International Conference on Hardware Software Codesign archive
Proceedings of the eighth international workshop on Hardware/software codesign table of contents
San Diego, California, United States
Pages: 152 - 156  
Year of Publication: 2000
ISBN:1-58113-268-9
Authors
Deborah Wilson  JRS Research Laboratories Inc., 2300 East Katella Avenue, Suite 300, Anaheim, California
Daniel Dayton  JRS Research Laboratories Inc., 2300 East Katella Avenue, Suite 300, Anaheim, California
R. Todd Hansell  Former Employee of Motorola, Motorola Automotive and Industrial, Electronics Group/AECS, Detroit, Michigan
Sponsors
Computer Conservation Society : Computer Conservation Society
IFIP WG 10.5 : IFIP WG 10.5
SIGSOFT: ACM Special Interest Group on Software Engineering
SIGDA: ACM Special Interest Group on Design Automation
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

The automotive electronics industry is experiencing an era of unprecedented growth. Driven by emissions and safety legislation, fuel economy constraints, cost constraints, and customer demand for convenience features and enhanced performance, electronic controls are steadily replacing their mechanical and hydraulic predecessors. As the sophistication of these systems grows, their complexity has grown dramatically as well, creating difficulties in the application of traditional engineering methods to modern systems. New design paradigms, such as model-based control, have begun to emerge. These factors have created a need for more sophisticated, integrated tool sets to help support the systems engineering process and manage the designs of the new systems. The Automotive Systems Design Environment (ASDEN) project has been undertaken by Motorola to address this need for a sophisticated, capable framework of interoperable tools. This project paves the way for a future where the “Virtual Automobile” becomes a reality: a car designed, simulated, and “driven” before the first physical prototype is even built.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Chowanietz, Eric. 1995. Automobile Electronics. London: Reed-Elsevier.
 
2
JRS Research Laboratories Inc. Design Methodology for the Automotive Systems Design Environment (ASDEN), 8 August 1997.
 
3

Collaborative Colleagues:
Deborah Wilson: colleagues
Daniel Dayton: colleagues
R. Todd Hansell: colleagues