48,105 research outputs found
An active, ontology-driven network service for Internet collaboration
Web portals have emerged as an important means of collaboration on the WWW, and the integration of ontologies promises to make them more accurate in how they serve users’ collaboration and information location requirements. However, web portals are essentially a centralised architecture resulting in difficulties supporting seamless roaming between portals and collaboration between groups supported on different portals. This paper proposes an alternative approach to collaboration over the web using ontologies that is de-centralised and exploits content-based networking. We argue that this approach promises a user-centric, timely, secure and location-independent mechanism, which is potentially more scaleable and universal than existing centralised portals
Grid Databases for Shared Image Analysis in the MammoGrid Project
The MammoGrid project aims to prove that Grid infrastructures can be used for
collaborative clinical analysis of database-resident but geographically
distributed medical images. This requires: a) the provision of a
clinician-facing front-end workstation and b) the ability to service real-world
clinician queries across a distributed and federated database. The MammoGrid
project will prove the viability of the Grid by harnessing its power to enable
radiologists from geographically dispersed hospitals to share standardized
mammograms, to compare diagnoses (with and without computer aided detection of
tumours) and to perform sophisticated epidemiological studies across national
boundaries. This paper outlines the approach taken in MammoGrid to seamlessly
connect radiologist workstations across a Grid using an "information
infrastructure" and a DICOM-compliant object model residing in multiple
distributed data stores in Italy and the UKComment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Elastic Business Process Management: State of the Art and Open Challenges for BPM in the Cloud
With the advent of cloud computing, organizations are nowadays able to react
rapidly to changing demands for computational resources. Not only individual
applications can be hosted on virtual cloud infrastructures, but also complete
business processes. This allows the realization of so-called elastic processes,
i.e., processes which are carried out using elastic cloud resources. Despite
the manifold benefits of elastic processes, there is still a lack of solutions
supporting them.
In this paper, we identify the state of the art of elastic Business Process
Management with a focus on infrastructural challenges. We conceptualize an
architecture for an elastic Business Process Management System and discuss
existing work on scheduling, resource allocation, monitoring, decentralized
coordination, and state management for elastic processes. Furthermore, we
present two representative elastic Business Process Management Systems which
are intended to counter these challenges. Based on our findings, we identify
open issues and outline possible research directions for the realization of
elastic processes and elastic Business Process Management.Comment: Please cite as: S. Schulte, C. Janiesch, S. Venugopal, I. Weber, and
P. Hoenisch (2015). Elastic Business Process Management: State of the Art and
Open Challenges for BPM in the Cloud. Future Generation Computer Systems,
Volume NN, Number N, NN-NN., http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.future.2014.09.00
GoFFish: A Sub-Graph Centric Framework for Large-Scale Graph Analytics
Large scale graph processing is a major research area for Big Data
exploration. Vertex centric programming models like Pregel are gaining traction
due to their simple abstraction that allows for scalable execution on
distributed systems naturally. However, there are limitations to this approach
which cause vertex centric algorithms to under-perform due to poor compute to
communication overhead ratio and slow convergence of iterative superstep. In
this paper we introduce GoFFish a scalable sub-graph centric framework
co-designed with a distributed persistent graph storage for large scale graph
analytics on commodity clusters. We introduce a sub-graph centric programming
abstraction that combines the scalability of a vertex centric approach with the
flexibility of shared memory sub-graph computation. We map Connected
Components, SSSP and PageRank algorithms to this model to illustrate its
flexibility. Further, we empirically analyze GoFFish using several real world
graphs and demonstrate its significant performance improvement, orders of
magnitude in some cases, compared to Apache Giraph, the leading open source
vertex centric implementation.Comment: Under review by a conference, 201
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