Franco Zambonelli,
Andrea Omicini, Bernhard Anzengruber, Gabriella Castelli, Francesco L. DeAngelis, Giovanna Di Marzo Serugendo, Simon Dobson, José Luis Fernandez-Marquez, Alois Ferscha, Marco Mamei,
Stefano Mariani,
Ambra Molesini,
Sara Montagna, Jussi Nieminen,
Danilo Pianini, Matteo Risoldi, Alberto Rosi, Graeme Stevenson,
Mirko Viroli, Juan Ye
Pervasive and Mobile Computing 17-B, pp. 236–252
febbraio 2015
Pervasive computing systems can be modeled effectively as populations of interacting autonomous components. The key challenge to realizing such models is in getting separately-specified and -developed sub-systems to discover and interoperate with each other in an open and extensible way, supported by appropriate middleware services. In this paper, we argue that nature-inspired coordination models offer a promising way of addressing this challenge. We first frame the various dimensions along which nature-inspired coordination models can be defined, and survey the most relevant proposals in the area. We describe the nature-inspired coordination model developed within the SAPERE project as a synthesis of existing approaches, and show how it can effectively support the multifold requirements of modern and emerging pervasive services. We conclude by identifying what we think are the open research challenges in this area, and identify some research directions that we believe are promising.
parole chiave
Pervasive computing; Multi-agent systems; Coordination models; Self-organization
rivista o collana
Pervasive and Mobile Computing
(PMC)