4 resultados para Casebased reasoning

em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Eine wesentliche Funktionalität bei der Verwendung semantischer Technologien besteht in dem als Reasoning bezeichneten Prozess des Ableitens von impliziten Fakten aus einer explizit gegebenen Wissensbasis. Der Vorgang des Reasonings stellt vor dem Hintergrund der stetig wachsenden Menge an (semantischen) Informationen zunehmend eine Herausforderung in Bezug auf die notwendigen Ressourcen sowie der Ausführungsgeschwindigkeit dar. Um diesen Herausforderungen zu begegnen, adressiert die vorliegende Arbeit das Reasoning durch eine massive Parallelisierung der zugrunde liegenden Algorithmen und der Einführung von Konzepten für eine ressourceneffiziente Ausführung. Diese Ziele werden unter Berücksichtigung der Verwendung eines regelbasierten Systems verfolgt, dass im Gegensatz zur Implementierung einer festen Semantik die Definition der anzuwendenden Ableitungsregeln während der Laufzeit erlaubt und so eine größere Flexibilität bei der Nutzung des Systems bietet. Ausgehend von einer Betrachtung der Grundlagen des Reasonings und den verwandten Arbeiten aus den Bereichen des parallelen sowie des regelbasierten Reasonings werden zunächst die Funktionsweise von Production Systems sowie die dazu bereits existierenden Ansätze für die Optimierung und im Speziellen der Parallelisierung betrachtet. Production Systems beschreiben die grundlegende Funktionalität der regelbasierten Verarbeitung und sind somit auch die Ausgangsbasis für den RETE-Algorithmus, der zur Erreichung der Zielsetzung der vorliegenden Arbeit parallelisiert und für die Ausführung auf Grafikprozessoren (GPUs) vorbereitet wird. Im Gegensatz zu bestehenden Ansätzen unterscheidet sich die Parallelisierung insbesondere durch die gewählte Granularität, die nicht durch die anzuwendenden Regeln, sondern von den Eingabedaten bestimmt wird und sich damit an der Zielarchitektur orientiert. Aufbauend auf dem Konzept der parallelen Ausführung des RETE-Algorithmus werden Methoden der Partitionierung und Verteilung der Arbeitslast eingeführt, die zusammen mit Konzepten der Datenkomprimierung sowie der Verteilung von Daten zwischen Haupt- und Festplattenspeicher ein Reasoning über Datensätze mit mehreren Milliarden Fakten auf einzelnen Rechnern erlauben. Eine Evaluation der eingeführten Konzepte durch eine prototypische Implementierung zeigt für die adressierten leichtgewichtigen Ontologiesprachen einerseits die Möglichkeit des Reasonings über eine Milliarde Fakten auf einem Laptop, was durch die Reduzierung des Speicherbedarfs um rund 90% ermöglicht wird. Andererseits kann der dabei erzielte Durchsatz mit aktuellen State of the Art Reasonern verglichen werden, die eine Vielzahl an Rechnern in einem Cluster verwenden.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In recent years, progress in the area of mobile telecommunications has changed our way of life, in the private as well as the business domain. Mobile and wireless networks have ever increasing bit rates, mobile network operators provide more and more services, and at the same time costs for the usage of mobile services and bit rates are decreasing. However, mobile services today still lack functions that seamlessly integrate into users’ everyday life. That is, service attributes such as context-awareness and personalisation are often either proprietary, limited or not available at all. In order to overcome this deficiency, telecommunications companies are heavily engaged in the research and development of service platforms for networks beyond 3G for the provisioning of innovative mobile services. These service platforms are to support such service attributes. Service platforms are to provide basic service-independent functions such as billing, identity management, context management, user profile management, etc. Instead of developing own solutions, developers of end-user services such as innovative messaging services or location-based services can utilise the platform-side functions for their own purposes. In doing so, the platform-side support for such functions takes away complexity, development time and development costs from service developers. Context-awareness and personalisation are two of the most important aspects of service platforms in telecommunications environments. The combination of context-awareness and personalisation features can also be described as situation-dependent personalisation of services. The support for this feature requires several processing steps. The focus of this doctoral thesis is on the processing step, in which the user’s current context is matched against situation-dependent user preferences to find the matching user preferences for the current user’s situation. However, to achieve this, a user profile management system and corresponding functionality is required. These parts are also covered by this thesis. Altogether, this thesis provides the following contributions: The first part of the contribution is mainly architecture-oriented. First and foremost, we provide a user profile management system that addresses the specific requirements of service platforms in telecommunications environments. In particular, the user profile management system has to deal with situation-specific user preferences and with user information for various services. In order to structure the user information, we also propose a user profile structure and the corresponding user profile ontology as part of an ontology infrastructure in a service platform. The second part of the contribution is the selection mechanism for finding matching situation-dependent user preferences for the personalisation of services. This functionality is provided as a sub-module of the user profile management system. Contrary to existing solutions, our selection mechanism is based on ontology reasoning. This mechanism is evaluated in terms of runtime performance and in terms of supported functionality compared to other approaches. The results of the evaluation show the benefits and the drawbacks of ontology modelling and ontology reasoning in practical applications.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Context awareness, dynamic reconfiguration at runtime and heterogeneity are key characteristics of future distributed systems, particularly in ubiquitous and mobile computing scenarios. The main contributions of this dissertation are theoretical as well as architectural concepts facilitating information exchange and fusion in heterogeneous and dynamic distributed environments. Our main focus is on bridging the heterogeneity issues and, at the same time, considering uncertain, imprecise and unreliable sensor information in information fusion and reasoning approaches. A domain ontology is used to establish a common vocabulary for the exchanged information. We thereby explicitly support different representations for the same kind of information and provide Inter-Representation Operations that convert between them. Special account is taken of the conversion of associated meta-data that express uncertainty and impreciseness. The Unscented Transformation, for example, is applied to propagate Gaussian normal distributions across highly non-linear Inter-Representation Operations. Uncertain sensor information is fused using the Dempster-Shafer Theory of Evidence as it allows explicit modelling of partial and complete ignorance. We also show how to incorporate the Dempster-Shafer Theory of Evidence into probabilistic reasoning schemes such as Hidden Markov Models in order to be able to consider the uncertainty of sensor information when deriving high-level information from low-level data. For all these concepts we provide architectural support as a guideline for developers of innovative information exchange and fusion infrastructures that are particularly targeted at heterogeneous dynamic environments. Two case studies serve as proof of concept. The first case study focuses on heterogeneous autonomous robots that have to spontaneously form a cooperative team in order to achieve a common goal. The second case study is concerned with an approach for user activity recognition which serves as baseline for a context-aware adaptive application. Both case studies demonstrate the viability and strengths of the proposed solution and emphasize that the Dempster-Shafer Theory of Evidence should be preferred to pure probability theory in applications involving non-linear Inter-Representation Operations.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Self-adaptive software provides a profound solution for adapting applications to changing contexts in dynamic and heterogeneous environments. Having emerged from Autonomic Computing, it incorporates fully autonomous decision making based on predefined structural and behavioural models. The most common approach for architectural runtime adaptation is the MAPE-K adaptation loop implementing an external adaptation manager without manual user control. However, it has turned out that adaptation behaviour lacks acceptance if it does not correspond to a user’s expectations – particularly for Ubiquitous Computing scenarios with user interaction. Adaptations can be irritating and distracting if they are not appropriate for a certain situation. In general, uncertainty during development and at run-time causes problems with users being outside the adaptation loop. In a literature study, we analyse publications about self-adaptive software research. The results show a discrepancy between the motivated application domains, the maturity of examples, and the quality of evaluations on the one hand and the provided solutions on the other hand. Only few publications analysed the impact of their work on the user, but many employ user-oriented examples for motivation and demonstration. To incorporate the user within the adaptation loop and to deal with uncertainty, our proposed solutions enable user participation for interactive selfadaptive software while at the same time maintaining the benefits of intelligent autonomous behaviour. We define three dimensions of user participation, namely temporal, behavioural, and structural user participation. This dissertation contributes solutions for user participation in the temporal and behavioural dimension. The temporal dimension addresses the moment of adaptation which is classically determined by the self-adaptive system. We provide mechanisms allowing users to influence or to define the moment of adaptation. With our solution, users can have full control over the moment of adaptation or the self-adaptive software considers the user’s situation more appropriately. The behavioural dimension addresses the actual adaptation logic and the resulting run-time behaviour. Application behaviour is established during development and does not necessarily match the run-time expectations. Our contributions are three distinct solutions which allow users to make changes to the application’s runtime behaviour: dynamic utility functions, fuzzy-based reasoning, and learning-based reasoning. The foundation of our work is a notification and feedback solution that improves intelligibility and controllability of self-adaptive applications by implementing a bi-directional communication between self-adaptive software and the user. The different mechanisms from the temporal and behavioural participation dimension require the notification and feedback solution to inform users on adaptation actions and to provide a mechanism to influence adaptations. Case studies show the feasibility of the developed solutions. Moreover, an extensive user study with 62 participants was conducted to evaluate the impact of notifications before and after adaptations. Although the study revealed that there is no preference for a particular notification design, participants clearly appreciated intelligibility and controllability over autonomous adaptations.