E-Book, Englisch, 253 Seiten
Rudolph Developing Ambient Intelligence
1. Auflage 2008
ISBN: 978-2-287-78544-3
Verlag: Springer Paris
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Proceedings of the second International Conference on Ambient Intelligence developments (AmI.d '07)
E-Book, Englisch, 253 Seiten
ISBN: 978-2-287-78544-3
Verlag: Springer Paris
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
At the time of the introduction of the Ambient Intelligence (AmI) concept many scenarios where considered to be visionary or even science fiction. Enabled by current technology, many aspects of these scenarios are slowly but inexorably becoming true. However, we are still facing important challenges that need further investments in research and industrialization. Current software engineering techniques and tools are not prepared to deal with the development of applications for what we could call AmI ecosystems, lacking a fixed architecture, controlled limits and even owners. The comfortable boundaries of static architectures and well-defined limits and owners are not existent in these AmI ecosystems.
In its second year AmI.d again shows the heterogeneity of research challenges related to Ambient Intelligence. Many disciplines are involved and have to co-ordinate their efforts in resolving the strongly related research issues.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Preface;8
2;Table of Contents;10
3;Research Track Proceedings;13
3.1;Abstracting connection volatility through tagged futures;14
3.2;Modeling Decentralized Information Flow in Ambient Environments;35
3.3;Secure Profiles as a Cornerstone in Emerging Ambient Intelligence Scenarios;46
3.4;Architecture and Design Patterns for Ambient Intelligence: an Industry Perspective;67
3.5;An Ambient Intelligence Based Multi-Agent Architecture;80
3.6;XMPP based Health Care Integrated Ambient Systems Middleware;104
3.7;Increasing Interactivity in Agent-based Advanced Pocket-Device Service Application;115
3.8;Towards a Model Driven Development of Context-aware Systems for Ami Environments ;126
3.9;Taking Ownership of Computational Resources;137
3.10;Bluetooth Indoor Positioning and Ambient Information System;145
3.11;XACML as a Security and Dependability Pattern for Access Control in Ami environments ;155
3.12;Rationale for defining NCIPs (Neighborhood and Context Interaction Primitives) position paper;168
3.13;Agent Oriented Ami Engineering;178
4;EuroTRUSTAmI workshop : European R&D towards trusted Ambient Intelligence;192
4.1;Introduction;193
4.2;The Networked European Software and Services Initiative;195
4.3;Project Serenity;196
4.4;Project SMEPP;198
4.5;Project Discreet;200
4.6;Project EmBounded;204
4.7;Project HAGGLE;206
4.8;Project GridTrust;208
4.9;Project ReSIST;211
4.10;Project MINAmI;214
4.11;Project MonAMI;217
4.12;Project ONE;219
4.13;Project RE-Trust;222
4.14;Project SENSE;225
4.15;Project SENSORIA;228
4.16;Project UBISEC&SENS;230
4.17;Project WASP;232
4.18;Project ESFORS;234
4.19;Project PalCom;236
4.20;Project R4eGov;238
4.21;EPoSS;240
4.22;Project Hydra;242
4.23;Project BioSecure;244
4.24;Project GREDIA;247
4.25;Project GridEcon;250
4.26;Cyber-Security EU/US. Meet the pathfinders of our future;252
5;Author Index;264




