Writing Notes

Formal Methods

Logical errors in computer hardware and software can have significant economic and societal impact, while errors in the embedded systems that are increasingly used in safety-critical applications like “drive-by-wire” and implantable medical devices, can lead to loss of human life.

Our formal methods group aims to help hardware and software engineers build more reliable systems through model checking — a technique that relies on building a finite model of a system and checking that a desired property holds in that model. The technical challenge in model checking is in devising algorithms and data structures that allow us to handle large search spaces. Model checking is fast, automatic, and supports partial specifications. Above all, it produces counterexamples, which usually represent subtle errors in design and can aid in debugging.

At Carnegie Mellon we promote lightweight formal methods. Rather than try to specify all properties of an entire system and attempt to do a complete proof of correctness, we advocate specifying critical properties of a critical part of a system and focus on finding errors. “Spec ’n Check” is our mantra. Our techniques scale beyond what people can do by hand and avoid fallibility of human reasoning.

Events in Security, Programming Languages, Formal Methods

CyLab Seminar

Program Analysis in the Face of Uncertainty

Faculty Working in this Area

Last First Professional Title Available To Advise?
Aldrich Jonathan Professor, Affiliated Faculty
Brookes Stephen Professor
Brumley David Professor of ECE, Affiliated Faculty
Fredrikson Matt Associate Professor
Garlan David Professor
Harper Robert Professor
Heule Marijn Associate Professor
Hoffmann Jan Associate Professor
Parno Bryan Professor
Pfenning Frank Professor
Wing Jeannette Adjunct Faculty
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