Computer science and ambient intelligence:
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
ISTE [u.a.]
2013
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Computer engineering series
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XV, 335 S. Ill., graf. Darst. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9781848214378 |
Internformat
MARC
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804150161156341760 |
---|---|
adam_text | Table
of
Contents
Preface
хш
Chapter
1.
Ambient inteUigence: Science or Fad?
................ 1
Joëlle
Coutaz and James L. Crowley
1.1.
Ambient intelligence: still young at
20
years
................ 1
1.2.
A step forward in the evolution of informatics
............... 3
1.2.1.
Fifty years ago: the computer as an isolated
critical resource
................................... 3
1.2.2.
Thirty years ago: the user at the center of design
........... 5
1.2.3.
The past decade: combining physical, social,
and digital worlds
................................. 7
1.3.
Extreme challenges
............................... 10
1.3.1.
Multi-scale
.................................. 10
1.3.2.
Heterogeneity
................................ 10
1.3.3.
Dynamic adaptation
............................ 11
1.4.
Conclusion
.................................... 11
1.5.
Bibliography
................................... 12
Chapter
2.
Thinking about Ethics
.......................... 15
Anne-Marie Benoit
2.1.
Ethics and fundamental rights
......................... 16
2.2.
Ethics and values
................................ 18
2.3.
Ethics and future perspectives
......................... 20
2.4.
Bibliography
................................... 20
vi Computer Science and
Ambient
Intelligence
Chapter
3.
Sensor Networks
............................. 21
Jean Carle, Michael Hauspie, Nathalie Mitton,
Tahiry Razafindralambo and David Simplot-Ryl
3.1.
MAC layers for wireless sensor networks
.................. 21
3.1.1.
Challenges atMAClevel
.......................... 21
3.1.2.
Energy consumption
............................ 22
3.1.3.
Parameters for evaluating a MAClayer
................ 23
3.1.4.
MAC Protocols
............................... 23
3.2.
Topology control
................................ 24
3.2.1.
Range adjustment
............................. 25
3.2.2.
Spanning
................................... 27
3.3.
Routing
...................................... 33
3.3.1.
Broadcast
.................................. 33
3.3.2.
Classic routing
............................... 36
3.3.3.
Geographic routing
............................. 40
3.4.
Deployment of sensor networks
........................ 42
3.4.1.
Knowing the hardware
........................... 43
3.4.2.
Development process
........................... 45
3.4.3.
Ensuring stability
.............................. 45
3.4.4.
Preparing for deployment
......................... 46
3.5.
Bibliography
................................... 47
Chapter
4.
Smart Systems, Ambient Intelligence and Energy Sources:
Current Developments and Future Applications
................. 55
Georges Akhras and Florence
Sèdes
4.1.
Introduction
.................................... 55
4.2.
Did you say smart systems ?
......................... 56
4.2.1.
Smart materials
............................... 58
4.2.2.
Sensors and actuators
........................... 59
4.2.3.
Command and control unit
........................ 59
4.2.4.
Managing data and security
........................ 59
4.3.
Energy harvesting
................................ 60
4.3.1.
Initial applications
............................. 60
4.3.2.
Second generation
............................. 62
4.3.3.
Managing systems, processes and energy
................ 62
4.4.
Wearable computers and smart fibers
.................... 63
4.5.
Other applications
................................ 64
4.6.
Conclusion
.................................... 66
4.7.
Bibliography
................................... 68
Table
of
Contents
vii
Chapter
5.
Middleware in Ubiquitous Computing
................ 71
Vincent Hourdin, Nicolas Ferry, Jean-Yves
Tigli,
Stéphane Lavirotte
and
Gaétan
Rey
5.1.
Middleware
.................................... 71
5.2.
Development of middleware with new computer environments
..... 71
5.2.1.
Distribution
................................. 72
5.2.2.
Mobility
................................... 73
5.2.3.
Context awareness and adaptation
.................... 74
5.2.4.
Ubiquitous computing
........................... 74
5.3.
Main properties of middleware in ubiquitous computing
........ 75
5.3.1.
Heterogeneity and interoperability
................... 76
5.3.2.
Scalability
.................................. 77
5.3.3.
Mobility
................................... 77
5.3.4.
Variability, unpredictability, extensibility and spontaneous
interactions
..................................... 78
5.3.5.
Dynamic adaptation
............................ 80
5.3.6.
Context awareness
............................. 81
5.3.7.
Security
................................... 82
5.3.8.
Adapted and controlled response times
................. 83
5.4.
Bibliography
................................... 84
Chapter
6.
WComp, Middleware for Ubiquitous Computing
and System Focused Adaptation
........................... 89
Nicolas Ferry, Vincent Hourdin,
Stéphane Lavirotte,
Gaétan
Rey
and Jean-Yves
Tigli
6.1.
Service infrastructure in devices
....................... 89
6.1.1.
Interoperability
............................... 92
6.1.2.
Event communication
........................... 93
6.1.3.
Appearance and disappearance
...................... 94
6.1.4.
Decentralized dynamic discovery
.................... 95
6.1.5.
WSOAD
................................... 96
6.2.
Dynamic service composition
......................... 97
6.2.1.
Composition of services for devices: LCA
............... 98
6.2.2.
Distributed composition: SLCA
..................... 100
6.3.
Dynamic adaptation of applications to variations in their
infrastructure
......................................
*04
6.3.1.
The principles of AOPs
..........................
105
6.3.2.
Transverse adaptation
........................... 107
6.3.3.
Summary
...................................
I
6.4.
Bibliography
................................... 1
^
viii Computer Science and Ambient
Intelligence
Chapter
7.
Data Access and Ambient
Computing
................ 121
Thierry
Delot and
Marie Thilliez
7.1.
Introduction
.................................... 121
7.2.
General context
................................. 122
7.2.1.
Devices
.................................... 123
7.2.2.
Communication
............................... 123
7.2.3.
Mobility...................................
123
7.3.
Types of queries
................................. 125
7.3.1.
Location queries
.............................. 125
7.3.2.
Continuous queries
............................. 125
7.4.
Data access models
............................... 126
7.4.1.
The Pull model
............................... 126
7.4.2.
The Push model
............................... 127
7.5.
Query optimization
............................... 128
7.6.
Sensitivity to context
.............................. 130
7.7.
Conclusion
.................................... 131
7.8.
Bibliography
................................... 132
Chapter
8.
Security and Ambient Systems: A Study on the Evolution
of Access Management in Pervasive Information Systems
........... 135
Dana
Al
Kukhun and Florence
SEDES
8.1.
Introduction
.................................... 135
8.2.
Managing access in pervasive information systems
............ 137
8.2.1.
Basic access control models
....................... 137
8.2.2.
Managing service-oriented access: the XACML standard
...... 140
8.3.
The evolution of context-aware RBAC models
............... 141
8.3.1.
Examples of context-aware models
................... 141
8.3.2.
Summary
................................... 142
8.4.
Conclusion
.................................... 143
8.5.
Bibliography
................................... 143
Chapter
9.
Interactive Systems and User-Centered Adaptation:
The Plasticity of User Interfaces
........................... 147
Joëlle
Coutaz,
Gaëlle
Calvary,
Alexandre Demeure
and Lionel
Balme
9.1.
Introduction
.................................... 147
9.2.
The problem space of UI plasticity
...................... 149
9.2.1.
Plasticity and elasticity
........................... 150
9.2.2.
Adaptation capacity and its problem space
............... 150
9.2.3.
Context of use
................................ 159
Table
of
Contents ix
9.2.4. Meta-UI
and user control
......................... 163
9.2.5.
Utility, usability and value
........................ 168
9.2.6.
Summary
................................... 169
9.3.
The
CAMELEON
reference framework for rational
development of plastic UI
.............................. 170
9.3.1.
Relationships between models
...................... 173
9.3.2.
Development process
........................... 175
9.4.
The CAMELEON-RT run time infrastructure
............... 176
9.4.1.
Functional decomposition of CAMELEON-RT
............ 177
9.4.2.
Situation identifier
............................. 178
9.4.3.
Evolution engine
.............................. 179
9.4.4.
Component manager
............................ 179
9.4.5.
Adaptation producer
............................ 180
9.5.
Our principles for implementing plasticity
................. 181
9.6.
Conclusion: lessons learned and open challenges
............. 182
9.7.
Appendices
.................................... 185
9.7.1.
There is plasticity and there is plasticity!
................ 185
9.7.2.
Implementation tools
............................ 186
9.8.
Bibliography
................................... 193
Chapter
10.
Composition of User Interfaces
.................... 203
Gaëlle
Calvary, Anne-Marie Dery-Pinna, Audrey Occello,
Philippe Renevier
and Yoann Gabillon
10.1.
Problem
..................................... 203
10.2.
Case study
.................................... 205
10.2.1.
Description of the available services
.................. 205
10.2.2.
Examples of services built by composition
.............. 207
10.3.
Issues
....................................... 208
10.4.
State of the art in UI composition
...................... 210
10.4.1.
Composition: a shared concern
..................... 211
10.4.2.
UIs composition
.............................. 211
10.4.3.
The development process of UIs
.................... 212
10.4.4.
Generation of UIs
............................. 213
10.4.5.
Plasticity of UIs
.............................. 213
10.4.6.
Summary of the state of the art in UI composition
......... 214
10.5.
Two examples of approaches
......................... 215
10.5.1.
Composition driven by the UI and the context
of use: Compose
.................................. 215
10.5.2.
A resolution driven by the functional core: Alias
.......... 218
10.6.
Key statements and propositions
...................... 220
10.7.
Bibliography
.................................. 222
χ
Computer Science
and Ambient Intelligence
Chapter
11.
Smart Homes for People Suffering from
Cognitive Disorders
................................... 225
Sylvain
Giroux and
Hélène
Рюот
11.1.
Introduction
................................... 225
11.2.
The impact of cognitive disorders on society
............... 227
11.2.1.
Cognitive deficits have high human, social
and economic costs
................................. 227
11.2.2.
Cognitive assistance and remote monitoring:
a source of hope
.................................. 228
11.3.
Cognitive disorders, relevant clients and research at
DOMUS
..... 228
11.3.1.
Manifestations of cognitive difficulties in affected people
..... 228
11.3.2.
Fostering autonomy and aging in place
................ 229
11.3.3.
Accompanying caregivers
........................ 231
11.4.
The objectives of the research program conducted at
DOMUS
.... 231
11.4.1.
Benefits for individuals and society
.................. 232
11.4.2.
Transforming the habitat of people with cognitive deficits
..... 232
11.4.3.
Building bridges between research, practice and users
....... 233
11.5.
Pervasive computing and ambient intelligence
.............. 233
11.6.
An integrated and interdisciplinary approach to research
........ 234
11.6.1.
Guidelines and ethical lines that should not be crossed
....... 234
11.6.2.
Multidisciplinary solutions
....................... 235
11.6.3.
Leaving the laboratory to evaluate, validate and transfer
solutions
....................................... 235
11.6.4.
A concrete example of the research approach
applied at
DOMUS
................................. 236
11.7.
Transforming a residence into an intelligent habitat
........... 236
11.8.
Research activities
............................... 238
11.8.1.
Cognitive ortheses and remote monitoring
.............. 239
11.8.2.
Cognitive assistance in the home
.................... 239
11.8.3.
Cognitive assistance outside the home
................. 240
11.8.4.
Remote monitoring and organization of work
between caregivers
................................. 241
11.8.5.
The interactive AMELIS calendar: portal to an
intelligent habitat
.................................. 241
11.8.6.
Accompanied social networking
.................... 242
11.8.7.
Risk detection
............................... 242
11.8.8.
Ambient intelligence: ubiquity, activity recognition
and context awareness
............................... 243
11.8.9.
Advanced user interfaces
........................ 243
11.8.10.
Medical monitoring: gathering ecological data and
physiological data
................................. 244
11.8.11.
Cognitive modeling and personalization
............... 245
Table
of
Contents xi
11.8.12.
Heterogeneous networks, distributed systems
and use in real life
................................. 246
11.8.13.
Identification, localization, simulation and artificial
intelligence
..................................... 247
11.8.14.
Private life, security, and reliability
.................. 248
11.8.15.
Design and ergonomics
......................... 248
11.8.16.
Clinical studies, usability studies
................... 248
11.9.
Conclusion
................................... 253
11.10.
Bibliography
.................................. 254
Chapter
12.
Pervasive Games and Critical Applications
............ 263
Isabelle
Astic,
Coline
Aunis, Jerome Dupire,
Viviane
Gal,
Eric Gressier-Soudan, Christophe Pitrey, Matthieu
Roy,
Françoise Sailhan,
Michel Simatic,
Alexandre
Topol
and
Emanuel
Zaza
12.1.
Introduction
................................... 263
12.2.
Pervasive games
................................ 264
12.2.1.
PSM: the game where you are the network
............ 266
12.3.
Critical ubiquitous applications
....................... 275
12.3.1.
Distributed black box
........................... 275
12.3.2.
Safeguarding heritage
.......................... 278
12.3.3.
Summary
.................................. 280
12.4.
Conclusion
................................... 281
12.5.
Bibliography
.................................. 282
Chapter
13.
InteUigent Transportation Systems
................. 285
Mikael
Desertot,
Sylvain Lecomte, Christophe
Gransart
and
Thierry Delot
13.1.
Introduction
................................... 285
13.2.
Software architecture
............................. 286
13.2.1.
For what sort of
applications?
...................... 286
13.2.2.
Importance
of the context........................
287
13.2.3.
Services
provided by the platform
................... 288
13.2.4.
Example of a platform
.......................... 293
13.3.
Dedicated transportation services and mode of communication
.... 294
13.3.1.
Transportation-oriented services that use an infrastructure
..... 295
13.3.2.
Exchange services between vehicles
.................. 295
13.4.
Public transportation services
........................ 301
13.4.1.
ICAU
....................................
301
13.4.2.
Internet access on trains
......................... 303
13.5.
Conclusion
...................................
303
13.6.
Bibliography
..................................
304
xii
Computer Science and
Ambient
Intelligence
Chapter
14.
Sociotechnical
Ambient
Systems:
From Test Scenario to Scientific Obstacles
.................... 307
Georges Da Costa, Jean-Pierre George and Marie-Pierre Gleizes
14.1.
Introduction
................................... 307
14.2.
Definitions and characteristics
........................ 308
14.3.
Real-life scenario: Ambient Campus
.................... 311
14.4.
Intuitive architectures
............................. 313
14.4.1.
The building blocks of the Ambient Campus scenario
....... 314
14.4.2.
Limitations of simplistic infrastructures
............... 314
14.4.3.
Context and role bubbles
........................ 315
14.5.
Scientific challenges
.............................. 316
14.5.1.
AmID
.................................... 318
14.5.2.
Network level
............................... 319
14.5.3.
Middleware level
............................. 320
14.5.4.
User service level
............................. 321
14.6.
Conclusion
................................... 324
14.7.
Acknowledgments
............................... 325
14.8.
Bibliography
.................................. 325
List of Authors
...................................... 329
Index
............................................ 333
|
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isbn | 9781848214378 |
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physical | XV, 335 S. Ill., graf. Darst. 24 cm |
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spelling | Computer science and ambient intelligence ed. by Gaëlle Calvary ... 1. publ. London [u.a.] ISTE [u.a.] 2013 XV, 335 S. Ill., graf. Darst. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Computer engineering series Ambient Intelligence (DE-588)4820282-4 gnd rswk-swf Ambient intelligence. (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Ambient Intelligence (DE-588)4820282-4 s DE-604 Calvary, Gaëlle (DE-588)1032204400 edt Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025858808&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Computer science and ambient intelligence Ambient Intelligence (DE-588)4820282-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4820282-4 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Computer science and ambient intelligence |
title_auth | Computer science and ambient intelligence |
title_exact_search | Computer science and ambient intelligence |
title_full | Computer science and ambient intelligence ed. by Gaëlle Calvary ... |
title_fullStr | Computer science and ambient intelligence ed. by Gaëlle Calvary ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Computer science and ambient intelligence ed. by Gaëlle Calvary ... |
title_short | Computer science and ambient intelligence |
title_sort | computer science and ambient intelligence |
topic | Ambient Intelligence (DE-588)4820282-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Ambient Intelligence Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025858808&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT calvarygaelle computerscienceandambientintelligence |