103 research outputs found

    3rd EGEE User Forum

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    We have organized this book in a sequence of chapters, each chapter associated with an application or technical theme introduced by an overview of the contents, and a summary of the main conclusions coming from the Forum for the chapter topic. The first chapter gathers all the plenary session keynote addresses, and following this there is a sequence of chapters covering the application flavoured sessions. These are followed by chapters with the flavour of Computer Science and Grid Technology. The final chapter covers the important number of practical demonstrations and posters exhibited at the Forum. Much of the work presented has a direct link to specific areas of Science, and so we have created a Science Index, presented below. In addition, at the end of this book, we provide a complete list of the institutes and countries involved in the User Forum

    State-of-the-art integration of decentralized energy management systems into the German smart meter gateway infrastructure

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    The German Smart Meter Gateway (SMGW) infrastructure enables digital access to metering data and distributed energy resources by external parties. There are, however, various restrictions in order to guarantee the privacy of consumers, and strong security requirements. Furthermore, in the current state of development, there are still several challenges to overcome in order to implement demand side management (DSM) measures. In this paper, we present a prototype enabling DSM measures within the SMGW infrastructure, using the smart grid traffic light concept. The prototype implements an automated decentralized energy management system (EMS) that optimally controls an electric vehicle charging station. In the development of this prototype, we did not only evaluate five of the seven available SMGW devices, but also push the limits of the infrastructure itself. The experiments demonstrated the successful implementation of the intended DSM measure by the EMS. Even though there are technical guidelines standardizing the functionality of SMGWs, our evaluation shows that there are substantial differences between the individual SMGW devices

    An overview of S-OGSA: A Reference Semantic Grid Architecture

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    The Grid's vision, of sharing diverse resources in a flexible, coordinated and secure manner through dynamic formation and disbanding of virtual communities, strongly depends on metadata. Currently, Grid metadata is generated and used in an ad hoc fashion, much of it buried in the Grid middleware's code libraries and database schemas. This ad hoc expression and use of metadata causes chronic dependency on human intervention during the operation of Grid machinery, leading to systems which are brittle when faced with frequent syntactic changes in resource coordination and sharing protocols. The Semantic Grid is an extension of the Grid in which rich resource metadata is exposed and handled explicitly, and shared and managed via Grid protocols. The layering of an explicit semantic infrastructure over the Grid Infrastructure potentially leads to increased interoperability and greater flexibility. In recent years, several projects have embraced the Semantic Grid vision. However, the Semantic Grid lacks a Reference Architecture or any kind of systematic framework for designing Semantic Grid components or applications. The Open Grid Service Architecture ( OGSA) aims to define a core set of capabilities and behaviours for Grid systems. We propose a Reference Architecture that extends OGSA to support the explicit handling of semantics, and defines the associated knowledge services to support a spectrum of service capabilities. Guided by a set of design principles, Semantic-OGSA ( S-OGSA) defines a model, the capabilities and the mechanisms for the Semantic Grid. We conclude by highlighting the commonalities and differences that the proposed architecture has with respect to other Grid frameworks. (c) 2006 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved

    04451 Abstracts Collection -- Future Generation Grids

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    The Dagstuhl Seminar 04451 "Future Generation Grid" was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl from 1st to 5th November 2004. The focus of the seminar was on open problems and future challenges in the design of next generation Grid systems. A total of 45 participants presented their current projects, research plans, and new ideas in the area of Grid technologies. Several evening sessions with vivid discussions on future trends complemented the talks. This report gives an overview of the background and the findings of the seminar

    The Knowledge Grid: A Platform to Increase the Interoperability of Computable Knowledge and Produce Advice for Health

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    Here we demonstrate how more highly interoperable computable knowledge enables systems to generate large quantities of evidence-based advice for health. We first provide a thorough analysis of advice. Then, because advice derives from knowledge, we turn our focus to computable, i.e., machine-interpretable, forms for knowledge. We consider how computable knowledge plays dual roles as a resource conveying content and as an advice enabler. In this latter role, computable knowledge is combined with data about a decision situation to generate advice targeted at the pending decision. We distinguish between two types of automated services. When a computer system provides computable knowledge, we say that it provides a knowledge service. When computer system combines computable knowledge with instance data to provide advice that is specific to an unmade decision we say that it provides an advice-giving service. The work here aims to increase the interoperability of computable knowledge to bring about better knowledge services and advice-giving services for health. The primary motivation for this research is the problem of missing or inadequate advice about health topics. The global demand for well-informed health advice far exceeds the global supply. In part to overcome this scarcity, the design and development of Learning Health Systems is being pursued at various levels of scale: local, regional, state, national, and international. Learning Health Systems fuse capabilities to generate new computable biomedical knowledge with other capabilities to rapidly and widely use computable biomedical knowledge to inform health practices and behaviors with advice. To support Learning Health Systems, we believe that knowledge services and advice-giving services have to be more highly interoperable. I use examples of knowledge services and advice-giving services which exclusively support medication use. This is because I am a pharmacist and pharmacy is the biomedical domain that I know. The examples here address the serious problems of medication adherence and prescribing safety. Two empirical studies are shared that demonstrate the potential to address these problems and make improvements by using advice. But primarily we use these examples to demonstrate general and critical differences between stand-alone, unique approaches to handling computable biomedical knowledge, which make it useful for one system, and common, more highly interoperable approaches, which can make it useful for many heterogeneous systems. Three aspects of computable knowledge interoperability are addressed: modularity, identity, and updateability. We demonstrate that instances of computable knowledge, and related instances of knowledge services and advice-giving services, can be modularized. We also demonstrate the utility of uniquely identifying modular instances of computable knowledge. Finally, we build on the computing concept of pipelining to demonstrate how computable knowledge modules can automatically be updated and rapidly deployed. Our work is supported by a fledgling technical knowledge infrastructure platform called the Knowledge Grid. It includes formally specified compound digital objects called Knowledge Objects, a conventional digital Library that serves as a Knowledge Object repository, and an Activator that provides an application programming interface (API) for computable knowledge. The Library component provides knowledge services. The Activator component provides both knowledge services and advice-giving services. In conclusion, by increasing the interoperability of computable biomedical knowledge using the Knowledge Grid, we demonstrate new capabilities to generate well-informed health advice at a scale. These new capabilities may ultimately support Learning Health Systems and boost health for large populations of people who would otherwise not receive well-informed health advice.PHDInformationUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146073/1/ajflynn_1.pd

    Service-Oriented Data Mining

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