57 research outputs found

    Extended Fault Taxonomy of SOA-Based Systems

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    Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is considered as a standard for enterprise software development. The main characteristics of SOA are dynamic discovery and composition of software services in a heterogeneous environment. These properties pose newer challenges in fault management of SOA-based systems (SBS). A proper understanding of different faults in an SBS is very necessary for effective fault handling. A comprehensive three-fold fault taxonomy is presented here that covers distributed, SOA specific and non-functional faults in a holistic manner. A comprehensive fault taxonomy is a key starting point for providing techniques and methods for accessing the quality of a given system. In this paper, an attempt has been made to outline several SBSs faults into a well-structured taxonomy that may assist developers to plan suitable fault repairing strategies. Some commonly emphasized fault recovery strategies are also discussed. Some challenges that may occur during fault handling of SBSs are also mentioned

    Is XML-based test case prioritization for validating WS-BPEL evolution effective in both average and adverse scenarios?

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    In real life, a tester can only afford to apply one test case prioritization technique to one test suite against a service-oriented workflow application once in the regression testing of the application, even if it results in an adverse scenario such that the actual performance in the test session is far below the average. It is unclear whether the factors of test case prioritization techniques known to be significant in terms of average performance can be extrapolated to adverse scenarios. In this paper, we examine whether such a factor or technique may consistently affect the rate of fault detection in both the average and adverse scenarios. The factors studied include prioritization strategy, artifacts to provide coverage data, ordering direction of a strategy, and the use of executable and non-executable artifacts. The results show that only a minor portion of the 10 studied techniques, most of which are based on the iterative strategy, are consistently effective in both average and adverse scenarios. To the best of our know-ledge, this paper presents the first piece of empirical evidence regarding the consistency in the effectiveness of test case prioritization techniques and factors of service-oriented workflow applications between average and adverse scenarios.published_or_final_versio

    Functional Networks in Parkinson’s Disease

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    Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative condition characterised pathologically by progressive dopaminergic cell loss in the substantia nigra pars compacta, dopamine depletion and resulting cortico- basal ganglia circuit dysfunction. There is a considerable variation in symptoms and treatment response between patients and therefore a need to individualise treatments, such as dopamine replacement therapy, and deep brain stimulation (DBS). We therefore require a better understanding of how different motor and non-motor symptoms emerge from the cortico-basal ganglia dysfunction characteristic of PD. In this thesis, I investigated the hypothesis that distinct symptoms in PD may be due to the dysfunction of distinct cortico-basal ganglia circuits. I characterised cortico-basal ganglia coupling by simultaneously recording cortical activity with magnetoencephalography (MEG) and basal ganglia activity from intracranial electrodes placed during DBS surgery for PD. Coupling was measured in terms of coherence – a frequency specific measure of coupling. I found that resting cortico-basal ganglia networks had distinct cortical topographies at different frequencies. Frontal regions coupled to both the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the pedunculopontine nucleus region (PPNR) in the beta frequency band whilst temporal, parietal and cerebellar areas coupled in the alpha range. I hypothesised that activity in the frontal beta network may relate to executive function, and found that local synchronisation in two frontal cortical hubs was related to stopping an on-going movement – a crucial executive function. In a related experiment in PD patients, transient frontal – basal ganglia coupling was again apparent during motor inhibition, but how this is related to behavioural performance needs further investigation. These results are useful in highlighting how cortico-basal ganglia networks can be separated both spatially and spectrally and how the function and dysfunction of these networks can be interrogated in PD patients. Future work should determine how different stimulation parameters differentially affect these distinct circuits
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