7 research outputs found

    Combined negotiations in E-commerce : concepts, architecture, and implementation

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    Thèse numérisée par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal

    Proceedings of The Multi-Agent Logics, Languages, and Organisations Federated Workshops (MALLOW 2010)

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    http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-627/allproceedings.pdfInternational audienceMALLOW-2010 is a third edition of a series initiated in 2007 in Durham, and pursued in 2009 in Turin. The objective, as initially stated, is to "provide a venue where: the cost of participation was minimum; participants were able to attend various workshops, so fostering collaboration and cross-fertilization; there was a friendly atmosphere and plenty of time for networking, by maximizing the time participants spent together"

    Multiparty session types for dynamic verification of distributed systems

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    In large-scale distributed systems, each application is realised through interactions among distributed components. To guarantee safe communication (no deadlocks and communication mismatches) we need programming languages and tools that structure, manage, and policy-check these interactions. Multiparty session types (MPST), a typing discipline for structured interactions between communicating processes, offers a promising approach. To date, however, session types applications have been limited to static verification, which is not always feasible and is often restrictive in terms of programming API and specifying policies. This thesis investigates the design and implementation of a runtime verification framework, ensuring conformance between programs and specifications. Specifications are written in Scribble, a protocol description language formally founded on MPST. The central idea of the approach is a dynamic monitor, which takes a form of a communicating finite state machine, automatically generated from Scribble specifications, and a communication runtime stipulating a message format. We extend and apply Scribble-based runtime verification in manifold ways. First, we implement a Python library, facilitated with session primitives and verification runtime. We integrate the library in a large cyber-infrastructure project for oceanography. Second, we examine multiple communication patterns, which reveal and motivate two novel extensions, asynchronous interrupts for verification of exception handling behaviours, and time constraints for enforcement of realtime protocols. Third, we apply the verification framework to actor programming by augmenting an actor library in Python with protocol annotations. For both implementations, measurements show Scribble-based dynamic checking delivers minimal overhead and allows expressive specifications. Finally, we explore a static analysis of Scribble specifications as to efficiently compute a safe global state from which a monitored system of interacting processes can be recovered after a failure. We provide an implementation of a verification framework for recovery in Erlang. Benchmarks show our recovery strategy outperforms a built-in static recovery strategy, in Erlang, on a number of use cases.Open Acces

    Technologies and Applications for Big Data Value

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    This open access book explores cutting-edge solutions and best practices for big data and data-driven AI applications for the data-driven economy. It provides the reader with a basis for understanding how technical issues can be overcome to offer real-world solutions to major industrial areas. The book starts with an introductory chapter that provides an overview of the book by positioning the following chapters in terms of their contributions to technology frameworks which are key elements of the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership and the upcoming Partnership on AI, Data and Robotics. The remainder of the book is then arranged in two parts. The first part “Technologies and Methods” contains horizontal contributions of technologies and methods that enable data value chains to be applied in any sector. The second part “Processes and Applications” details experience reports and lessons from using big data and data-driven approaches in processes and applications. Its chapters are co-authored with industry experts and cover domains including health, law, finance, retail, manufacturing, mobility, and smart cities. Contributions emanate from the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership and the Big Data Value Association, which have acted as the European data community's nucleus to bring together businesses with leading researchers to harness the value of data to benefit society, business, science, and industry. The book is of interest to two primary audiences, first, undergraduate and postgraduate students and researchers in various fields, including big data, data science, data engineering, and machine learning and AI. Second, practitioners and industry experts engaged in data-driven systems, software design and deployment projects who are interested in employing these advanced methods to address real-world problems

    Technologies and Applications for Big Data Value

    Get PDF
    This open access book explores cutting-edge solutions and best practices for big data and data-driven AI applications for the data-driven economy. It provides the reader with a basis for understanding how technical issues can be overcome to offer real-world solutions to major industrial areas. The book starts with an introductory chapter that provides an overview of the book by positioning the following chapters in terms of their contributions to technology frameworks which are key elements of the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership and the upcoming Partnership on AI, Data and Robotics. The remainder of the book is then arranged in two parts. The first part “Technologies and Methods” contains horizontal contributions of technologies and methods that enable data value chains to be applied in any sector. The second part “Processes and Applications” details experience reports and lessons from using big data and data-driven approaches in processes and applications. Its chapters are co-authored with industry experts and cover domains including health, law, finance, retail, manufacturing, mobility, and smart cities. Contributions emanate from the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership and the Big Data Value Association, which have acted as the European data community's nucleus to bring together businesses with leading researchers to harness the value of data to benefit society, business, science, and industry. The book is of interest to two primary audiences, first, undergraduate and postgraduate students and researchers in various fields, including big data, data science, data engineering, and machine learning and AI. Second, practitioners and industry experts engaged in data-driven systems, software design and deployment projects who are interested in employing these advanced methods to address real-world problems

    Un Modèle basé sur les Grammaires Attribuées Gardées pour les Processus Dynamiques, Centrés sur l’Utilisateur, Distribués et Collaboratifs: Cas de la Surveillance Epidémiologique

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    Dynamic processes in which users need to work together and collaborate in myriad ways on process models defined on-the-fly are fast becoming the rule rather than the exception. This thesis presents the design of a purely declarative modelling approach for dynamic, collaborative, user-centred, and data-driven processes. First, we organize the work of a user into task hierarchies which we model as mindmaps, which are trees used to visualize, organize, and log information about tasks in which the user is involved. We introduce the model of guarded attribute grammars, or GAG, to help the automation of updating such maps. A GAG consists of an underlying grammar, that specifies the logical structure of the map, with semantic rules which are used both to govern the evolution of the tree structure (how an open node may be rened to a sub-tree) and to compute the values of some of its attributes. The map enriched with this extra information and with high-level constructs for task dependencies; collaborationand user-interactions is termed an active workspace or AW. Communication between AWs is essentially through the exchange of messages without a shared memory thus enabling convenient distribution on an asynchronous architecture. Lastly, we introduce a language syntax for GAG specification and design a prototype that includes an internal domain specific language (in Haskell) for their specification and a graphical user interface to simulate its execution in a distributed environment. We motivate our approach and illustrate its language syntax and features on a case study for a disease surveillance system.De plus en plus, les utilisateurs collaborent de multiples façons sur des processus dynamiques construit de manière progressive. Dans cette thèse, nous concevons une nouvelle approche d´déclarative de modélisation des processus dynamiques, centrés sur l’utilisateur et dirigés par les données. Tout d’abord, nous organisons le travail d’un utilisateur par des hiérarchies des taches, représentées par des cartes heuristiques (arbre de taches). Ces derniers sont utilisés pour visualiser, organiser, et sauvegarder les informations sur les tâches menés par l’utilisateur. Nous introduisons ensuite le modèle des grammaires attribuées gardées, ou GAG, pour faciliter l’automatisation de la manipulation de telles cartes. Une GAG consiste en une grammaire sous-jacente, qui spécifie la structure logique de la carte, avec des règles sémantiques qui servent à la fois a` gouverner l’évolution de l’arbre des taches (raffinement des nœuds ouverts) et a` calculer les valeurs de certains de ses attributs. La carte enrichie de ces informations supplémentaires et d’autres concepts de haut niveau pour les d´dépendances entre les taches, la collaboration et les interactions utilisateur est appelée Active Workspace ou AW. La communication entre AWs est essentiellement par échange des messages permettant ainsi une implémentation commode sur une architecture distribuée et asynchrone. Enfin, nous décrivons une syntaxe de langage pour la spécification des processus en utilisant les GAGs et concevons un prototype qui inclut un langage spécifique au domaine, interne `a Haskell, pour leur spécification et une interface utilisateur graphique pour la simulation de l’exécution dans un environnement distribué. Nous motivons notre approche et illustrons sa syntaxe et ses caractéristiques sur une étude de cas portant sur le processus de surveillance épidémiologique
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