Cover image for Biologically inspired cooperative computing : IFIP 19th World Computer Congress ; TC 10, 1st IFIP International Conference on Biologically Inspired Computing, August 21-24, 2006, Santiago, Chile
Title:
Biologically inspired cooperative computing : IFIP 19th World Computer Congress ; TC 10, 1st IFIP International Conference on Biologically Inspired Computing, August 21-24, 2006, Santiago, Chile
Series:
International Federation for Information Processing ; 126
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Springer Science+Business, 2006
ISBN:
9780387346328
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30000010133232 QA76.9.A73 I574 2006 Open Access Book Proceedings, Conference, Workshop etc.
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Summary

Summary

In the world of information technology, it is no longer the computer in the classical sense where the majority of IT applications is executed; computing is everywhere. More than 20 billion processors have already been fabricated and the majority of them can be assumed to still be operational. At the same time, virtually every PC worldwide is connected via the Internet. This combination of traditional and embedded computing creates an artifact of a complexity, heterogeneity, and volatility unmanageable by classical means. Each of our technical artifacts with a built-in processor can be seen as a ''Thing that Thinks", a term introduced by MIT's Thinglab. It can be expected that in the near future these billions of Things that Think will become an ''Internet of Things", a term originating from ETH Zurich. This means that we will be constantly surrounded by a virtual "organism" of Things that Think. This organism needs novel, adequate design, evolution, and management means which is also one of the core challenges addressed by the recent German priority research program on Organic Computing.


Table of Contents

Algirdas AvižienisMichael G. Hinchey and Roy SterrittSteve R. WhiteHanene Azzag and David Ratsimba and David Da Costa and Christiane Guinot and Gilles VenturiniTiziana Margaria and Michael G. Hinchey and Harald Raffelt and James L. Rash and Christopher A. Rouff and Bernhard SteffenHolger Kasinger and Bernhard BauerMichael CebullaTales Heimfarth and Peter JanacikWolfgang Trumler and Tobias Thiemann and Theo UngererOmar U. Florez-Choque and Ernesto Cuadros-VargasAbdelmajid Bouajila and Andreas Bernauer and Andreas Herkersdorf and Wolfgang Rosenstiel and Oliver Bringmann and Walter StecheleBjorn Griese and Mario PorrmannAndreas GoebelsMiroslaw Dynia and Jaroslaw Kutylowski and Pawel Lorek and Friedhelm Meyer auf der HeideAndreas SchmidtHolger Giese and Norma Montealegre and Thomas Müller and Simon Oberthur and Bernd SchulzJan Haase and Andreas Hofmann and Klaus WaldschmidtAndry Tanoto and Jia Lei Du and Ulf Witkowski and Ulrich RückertWilli Richert and Bernd Kleinjohann and Lisa KleinjohannPeter Janacik and Tales Heimfarth
Biological Inspiration: Just a dream? (Invited papers)
1 An Immune System Paradigm for the Assurance of Dependability of Collaborative Self-Organizing Systemsp. 1
2 99% (Biological) Inspirationp. 7
3 Biologically-Inspired Design: Getting It Wrong and Getting It Rightp. 21
Web Organization
4 On Building Maps of Web Pages with a Cellular Automatonp. 33
Biological Inspiration 1
5 Completing and Adapting Models of Biological Processesp. 43
6 The Utility of Pollination for Autonomic Computingp. 55
7 Towards Distributed Reasoning for Behavioral Optimizationp. 65
Biological Inspiration 2
8 Ant Based Heuristic for OS Service Distribution on Ad-hoc Networksp. 75
9 An Artificial Hormone System for Self-organization of Networked Nodesp. 85
10 A Biologically Motivated Computational Architecture Inspired in the Human Immunological System to Quantify Abnormal Behaviors to Detect Presence of Intrudersp. 95
Chip-Design
11 Error Detection Techniques Applicable in an Architecture Framework and Design Methodology for Autonomic SoCsp. 107
Communication
12 A Reconfigurable Ethernet Switch for Self-Optimizing Communication Systemsp. 115
13 Learning Useful Communication Structures for Groups of Agentsp. 125
14 Maintaining Communication Between an Explorer and a Base Stationp. 137
Mechatronics and Computer Clusters
15 Active Patterns for Self-Optimization - Schemes for the Design of Intelligent Mechatronic Systemsp. 147
16 Acute Stress Response for Self-Optimizing Mechatronic Systemsp. 157
17 The Self Distributing Virtual Machine (SDVM): Making Computer Clusters Adaptivep. 169
Robotics and Sensor Networks:
18 Teleworkbench: An Analysis Tool for Multi-Robotic Experimentsp. 179
19 Trading off Impact and Mutation of Knowledge by Cooperatively Learning Robotsp. 189
20 Emergent Distribution of Operating System Services in Wireless Ad Hoc Networksp. 199
Author indexp. 209