38,401 research outputs found

    Formulating Update Messages

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    This paper presents a method with which we can generate update messages for use with Smalltalk's dependency mechanism. The basic idea is that any messages which cause an object to change are forwarded to the object's dependants. The method is perfectly general and future proofs objects against changes in their dependants

    Formulating Update Messages

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    This paper presents a method with which we can generate update messages for use with Smalltalk's dependency mechanism. The basic idea is that any messages which cause an object to change are forwarded to the object's dependants. The method is perfectly general and future-proofs objects against changes in their dependants. © 1995, ACM. All rights reserved

    Optimizing Age-of-Information in a Multi-class Queueing System

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    We consider the age-of-information in a multi-class M/G/1M/G/1 queueing system, where each class generates packets containing status information. Age of information is a relatively new metric that measures the amount of time that elapsed between status updates, thus accounting for both the queueing delay and the delay between packet generation. This gives rise to a tradeoff between frequency of status updates, and queueing delay. In this paper, we study this tradeoff in a system with heterogenous users modeled as a multi-class M/G/1M/G/1 queue. To this end, we derive the exact peak age-of-Information (PAoI) profile of the system, which measures the "freshness" of the status information. We then seek to optimize the age of information, by formulating the problem using quasiconvex optimization, and obtain structural properties of the optimal solution

    BAYESIAN HERDERS: ASYMMETRIC UPDATING OF RAINFALL BELIEFS IN RESPONSE TO EXTERNAL FORECASTS

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    Temporal climate risk weighs heavily on many of the world's poor. Recent advances in model-based climate forecasting have expanded the range, timeliness and accuracy of forecasts available to decision-makers whose welfare depends on stochastic climate outcomes. There has consequently been considerable recent investment in improved climate forecasting for the developing world. Yet, in cultures that have long used indigenous climate forecasting methods, forecasts generated and disseminated by outsiders using unfamiliar methods may not readily gain the acceptance necessary to induce behavioral change. The value of model-based climate forecasts depends critically on the premise that forecast recipients actually use external forecast information to update their rainfall expectations. We test this premise using unique survey data from pastoralists and agropastoralists in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya, specifying and estimating a model of herders updating seasonal rainfall beliefs. We find that those who receive and believe model-based seasonal climate forecasts indeed update their priors in the direction of the forecast received, assimilating optimistic forecasts more readily than pessimistic forecasts.Agribusiness, O1, D1, Q12,

    Evolving information systems: meeting the ever-changing environment

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    To meet the demands of organizations and their ever-changing environment, information systems are required which are able to evolve to the same extent as organizations do. Such a system has to support changes in all time-and application-dependent aspects. In this paper, requirements and a conceptual framework for evolving information systems are presented. This framework includes an architecture for such systems and a revision of the traditional notion of update. Based on this evolutionary notion of update (recording, correction and forgetting) a state transition-oriented model on three levels of abstraction (event level, recording level, correction level) is introduced. Examples are provided to illustrate the conceptual framework for evolving information systems
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