91 research outputs found

    The quality-aware service selection problem: an adaptive evolutionary approach

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    Die Qualität der Serviceerbringung (kurz QoS) ist ein wichtiger Aspekt in verteilten, Service-orientierten Systemen. Wenn mehrere Implementierungen einer Funktionalität koexistieren, kann die Wahl eines konkreten Services aufgrund von QoS-Aspekten getroffen werden. Leistung, Verfügbarkeit und Kosten sind Beispiele für QoS-Attribute eines Services. In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden Aspekte dieses Selektionsproblems anhand eines konkreten, Service-orientieren Systems vertieft. Es handelt sich dabei um das TAG-System in ATLAS, einem Hochenergiephysikexperiment am CERN, der Europäischen Organisation für Kernforschung. Die Daten und Services des TAG-Systems sind weltweit verteilt und müssen auf Anfrage selektiert und zu einem Workflow zusammengesetzt werden. Die Optimierung wird aus zwei unterschiedlichen Blickwinkeln. Die Selektion wird als ein dynamisches Pfadoptimierungsproblem unter Nebenbedingungen modelliert, wodurch QoS-Attribute sowohl der Knoten (Services) als auch der Kanten (Netzwerk) berücksichtigt werden können. Dynamische Aspekte des verteilten sind in der Problemformulierung integriert, da sie eine spezifische Herausforderung und Anforderung an Lösungsalgorithmen stellen. Für die dynamische Pareto-Optimierung von Serviceselektionsproblemen wird im Rahmen dieser Arbeit ein Optimierungsansatz mit einem genetischen Algorithmus präsentiert, der über einen persistenten Speicher von früheren Lösungen sowie eine automatische Adaptierung der Mutationsrate eine effiziente Anpassung an das sich ständig verändernde System gewährleistet. Eine Ontologie der Systemkomponenten sowie deren QoS-Attribute bildet die Basis für die Optimierung. Der Ansatz wird im Rahmen der Dissertation hinsichtlich der Qualität der erzielten Lösungen, der Adaptierung an änderungen sowie der Laufzeit evaluiert. Teile des Ansatzes wurden schließ lich in das TAG-System integriert und darin evaluiert.Quality of Service (QoS) is an important aspect in distributed, service-oriented systems. When several concrete services exist that implement the same functionality, the choice of a service instance among many can be made based on QoS considerations, objectives and constraints. Typically considered properties are performance, availability, and costs. In this thesis, aspects of the QoS-aware service selection problem are studied in the context of a distributed, service-oriented system from ATLAS, a high-energy physics experiment at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. In this so-called TAG system, data and modular services are distributed world-wide and need to be selected and composed on the fly, as a user starts a request. There are two conflicting optimization viewpoints. The service selection is modeled as a dynamic multi-constrained optimal path problem, which allows considering QoS attributes of service instances and of the network. The dynamic aspects of the system are included in the problem definition, as they represent a specific challenge. To address these issues regarding dynamics and conflicting viewpoints, this work proposes a service selection optimization framework based on a multi-objective genetic algorithm capable of efficiently dealing with changing conditions by using a persistent memory of good solutions, and a stepwise adaptation of the mutation rate. A system and QoS attribute ontology as well as a description of dynamics of distributed systems build the basis of the framework. The presented approach is evaluated in terms of optimization quality, adaptability to changes, runtime performance and scalability

    Applications of agent architectures to decision support in distributed simulation and training systems

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    This work develops the approach and presents the results of a new model for applying intelligent agents to complex distributed interactive simulation for command and control. In the framework of tactical command, control communications, computers and intelligence (C4I), software agents provide a novel approach for efficient decision support and distributed interactive mission training. An agent-based architecture for decision support is designed, implemented and is applied in a distributed interactive simulation to significantly enhance the command and control training during simulated exercises. The architecture is based on monitoring, evaluation, and advice agents, which cooperate to provide alternatives to the dec ision-maker in a time and resource constrained environment. The architecture is implemented and tested within the context of an AWACS Weapons Director trainer tool. The foundation of the work required a wide range of preliminary research topics to be covered, including real-time systems, resource allocation, agent-based computing, decision support systems, and distributed interactive simulations. The major contribution of our work is the construction of a multi-agent architecture and its application to an operational decision support system for command and control interactive simulation. The architectural design for the multi-agent system was drafted in the first stage of the work. In the next stage rules of engagement, objective and cost functions were determined in the AWACS (Airforce command and control) decision support domain. Finally, the multi-agent architecture was implemented and evaluated inside a distributed interactive simulation test-bed for AWACS Vv\u27Ds. The evaluation process combined individual and team use of the decision support system to improve the performance results of WD trainees. The decision support system is designed and implemented a distributed architecture for performance-oriented management of software agents. The approach provides new agent interaction protocols and utilizes agent performance monitoring and remote synchronization mechanisms. This multi-agent architecture enables direct and indirect agent communication as well as dynamic hierarchical agent coordination. Inter-agent communications use predefined interfaces, protocols, and open channels with specified ontology and semantics. Services can be requested and responses with results received over such communication modes. Both traditional (functional) parameters and nonfunctional (e.g. QoS, deadline, etc.) requirements and captured in service requests

    Advances in Grid Computing

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    This book approaches the grid computing with a perspective on the latest achievements in the field, providing an insight into the current research trends and advances, and presenting a large range of innovative research papers. The topics covered in this book include resource and data management, grid architectures and development, and grid-enabled applications. New ideas employing heuristic methods from swarm intelligence or genetic algorithm and quantum encryption are considered in order to explain two main aspects of grid computing: resource management and data management. The book addresses also some aspects of grid computing that regard architecture and development, and includes a diverse range of applications for grid computing, including possible human grid computing system, simulation of the fusion reaction, ubiquitous healthcare service provisioning and complex water systems

    Soft Computing Techiniques for the Protein Folding Problem on High Performance Computing Architectures

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    The protein-folding problem has been extensively studied during the last fifty years. The understanding of the dynamics of global shape of a protein and the influence on its biological function can help us to discover new and more effective drugs to deal with diseases of pharmacological relevance. Different computational approaches have been developed by different researchers in order to foresee the threedimensional arrangement of atoms of proteins from their sequences. However, the computational complexity of this problem makes mandatory the search for new models, novel algorithmic strategies and hardware platforms that provide solutions in a reasonable time frame. We present in this revision work the past and last tendencies regarding protein folding simulations from both perspectives; hardware and software. Of particular interest to us are both the use of inexact solutions to this computationally hard problem as well as which hardware platforms have been used for running this kind of Soft Computing techniques.This work is jointly supported by the FundaciónSéneca (Agencia Regional de Ciencia y Tecnología, Región de Murcia) under grants 15290/PI/2010 and 18946/JLI/13, by the Spanish MEC and European Commission FEDER under grant with reference TEC2012-37945-C02-02 and TIN2012-31345, by the Nils Coordinated Mobility under grant 012-ABEL-CM-2014A, in part financed by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). We also thank NVIDIA for hardware donation within UCAM GPU educational and research centers.Ingeniería, Industria y Construcció

    Intelligent Systems

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    This book is dedicated to intelligent systems of broad-spectrum application, such as personal and social biosafety or use of intelligent sensory micro-nanosystems such as "e-nose", "e-tongue" and "e-eye". In addition to that, effective acquiring information, knowledge management and improved knowledge transfer in any media, as well as modeling its information content using meta-and hyper heuristics and semantic reasoning all benefit from the systems covered in this book. Intelligent systems can also be applied in education and generating the intelligent distributed eLearning architecture, as well as in a large number of technical fields, such as industrial design, manufacturing and utilization, e.g., in precision agriculture, cartography, electric power distribution systems, intelligent building management systems, drilling operations etc. Furthermore, decision making using fuzzy logic models, computational recognition of comprehension uncertainty and the joint synthesis of goals and means of intelligent behavior biosystems, as well as diagnostic and human support in the healthcare environment have also been made easier

    Knowledge-based web services for context adaptation.

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    The need for higher value, reliable online services to promote new Internet-based business models is a requirement facing many technologists and business leaders. This need coupled with the trend towards greater mobility of networked devices and consumers creates significant challenges for current and future systems developers. The proliferation of mobile devices and the variability of their capabilities present an overwhelming number of options to systems designers and engineers who are tasked with the development of next generation context adaptive software services. Given the dynamic nature of this environment, implementing solutions for the current set of devices in the held makes an assumption that this deployment situation is somehow fixed this assumption does little to support the future and longer term needs within the marketplace. To add to the complexity, the timeframes necessary to develop robust and adaptive online software services can be long by comparison, so that the development projects and their resources are often behind on platform support before the first release is launched to the public. New approaches and methodologies for engineering dynamic and adaptive online services will be necessary and, as will be shown, are in fact mandated by the regulation imposed by service level guarantees. These new techniques and technology are commercially useless unless they can be used in engineering practice. New context adaptation processes and architectures must be capable of performing under strict service level agreements those that will undoubtedly govern future business relationships between online parties. This programme of engineering study and research investigates several key issues found in the emerging area of context adaptation services for online mobile networks. As a series of engineering investigations, the work described here involves a wider array of technical activity than found in traditional doctoral work and this is reflected throughout the dissertation. First, a clear definition of industrial motivation is stated to provide the engineering foundation. Next, the programme focuses on the nature of contextual adaptation through product development projects. The development process within these projects results in several issues with the commercial feasibility of the technology. From this point, the programme of study then progresses through the lifecycle of the engineering process, investigating at each stage the critical engineering challenges. Further analysis of the problems and possible solutions for deploying such adaptive solutions are reviewed and experiments are undertaken in the areas of systems component and performance analysis. System-wide architectural options are then evaluated with specific interest in using knowledge-base systems as one approach to solving some of the issues in context adaptation. The central hypothesis is that due to the dynamic nature of context parameters, the concept of a mobile device knowledge base as a necessary component of an architectural solution is presented and justified through prototyping efforts. The utility of web ontologies and other "soft computing" technologies on the nature of the solution are also examined through the review of relevant work and the engineering design of the demonstration system. These technology selections are supported directly by the industrial context and mission. In the final sections, the architecture is evaluated through the demonstration of promising techniques and methods in order to confirm understanding and to evaluate the use of knowledge-bases, AI and other technologies within the scope of the project. Through the implementation of a context adaptation architecture as a business process workflow, the impact of future trends of device reconfiguration are highlighted and discussed. To address the challenge of context adaptation in reconftgurable device architectures, an evolutionary computation approach is then presented as a means to provide an optimal baseline on which a service may execute. These last two techniques are discussed and new designs are proposed to specifically address the major issues uncovered in timely collection and evaluation of contextual parameters in a mobile service network. The programme summary and future work then brings together all the key results into a practitioner's reference guide for the creation of online context adaptive services with a greater degree of intelligence and maintainability while executing with the term of a service level agreement

    International conference "Information technologies in education in the 21st century": Conference proceedings.

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    Proceedings of a conference which concluded TEMPUS project JEP 25008_200

    Advances in Reinforcement Learning

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    Reinforcement Learning (RL) is a very dynamic area in terms of theory and application. This book brings together many different aspects of the current research on several fields associated to RL which has been growing rapidly, producing a wide variety of learning algorithms for different applications. Based on 24 Chapters, it covers a very broad variety of topics in RL and their application in autonomous systems. A set of chapters in this book provide a general overview of RL while other chapters focus mostly on the applications of RL paradigms: Game Theory, Multi-Agent Theory, Robotic, Networking Technologies, Vehicular Navigation, Medicine and Industrial Logistic

    Modelling of reliable service based operations support system (MORSBOSS)

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    Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThe underlying theme of this thesis is identification, classification, detection and prediction of cellular network faults using state of the art technologies, methods and algorithms
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