6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126c1fa
RESEARCH PRODUCT
An intelligent architecture for service provisioning in pervasive environments
Ole-christopher GranmoB. John OommenMartin GerdesAnis YazidiFrank Reichertsubject
VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Mathematics: 410::Applied mathematics: 413Service (systems architecture)business.industrycomputer.internet_protocolComputer scienceMobile computing020206 networking & telecommunicationsContext (language use)02 engineering and technologyService-oriented architectureRecommender systemWorld Wide WebVDP::Technology: 500::Information and communication technology: 550::Telecommunication: 5520202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering020201 artificial intelligence & image processingRelevance (information retrieval)Mobile telephonyUser interfacebusinesscomputerdescription
Accepted version of an article from the conference: 2011 International Symposium on Innovations in Intelligent Systems and Applications (INISTA). Definitive published version available from IEEE: http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/INISTA.2011.5946134 The vision of pervasive environments is being realized more than ever with the proliferation of services and computing resources located in our surrounding environments. Identifying those services that deserve the attention of the user is becoming an increasingly-challenging task. In this paper, we present an adaptive multi-criteria decision making mechanism for recommending relevant services to the mobile user. In this context Relevance is determined based on a user-centric approach that combines both the reputation of the service, the user's current context, the user's profile, as well as a record of the history of recommendations. Our decision making mechanism is adaptive in the sense that it is able to cope with users' contexts that are changing and drifts in the users' interests, while it simultaneously can track the reputations of services, and suppress repetitive notifications based on the history of the recommendations. The paper also includes some brief but comprehensive results concerning the task of tracking service reputations by analyzing and comprehending Word-of-Mouth communications, as well as by suppressing repetitive notifications. We believe that our architecture presents a significant contribution towards realizing intelligent and personalized service provisioning in pervasive environments.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-06-01 |