Self Organization in Coordination Systems using a WordNet-based Ontology

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In today's data-intensive world, the need for data organization has increased dramatically. Distributed systems are dealing with unheard amounts of data arising primarily from the popularization of pervasive computing applications and the so-called "data-in-the-cloud" paradigm. Naturally, agent coordination systems are affected by this data-increase phenomenon as they are often used as the basis for pervasive computing frameworks and cloud-computing systems. There have been a few works on coordination system to include data self-organization (e.g. SwarmLinda) however they generally organize their data based on naive approaches where items are either completely similar or dissimilar (1j0 approach for matching of data). Although this approach is useful, in general-purpose systems where the diversity of data items is large, data items will rarely be considered as plainly similar, leading to a situation where data does not self-organize well. In this paper we move towards a general-purpose approach to organization based on an ontology-defined concept relationship in WordNet. In our approach, data items are seen as concepts that have relation to other concepts: tuples are driven towards one-another at rates that are proportional to the strength of tuple relationship. We demonstrate that this approach leads to a good mechanism to self-organize data in data-intensive environments.

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page_white_acrobatSelf Organization in Coordination Systems using a WordNet-based Ontology (paper in proceedings, 2010) — Danilo Pianini, Sascia Virruso, Ronaldo Menezes, Andrea Omicini, Mirko Viroli
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page_white_acrobatSelf Organization in Coordination Systems using a WordNet-based Ontology (paper in proceedings, 2010) — Danilo Pianini, Sascia Virruso, Ronaldo Menezes, Andrea Omicini, Mirko Viroli