This paper presents BIONETS, which is a novel bio-inspired approach to the design of localized services in pervasive communication/computing environments. Conventional networking approaches are not suitable for such scenarios, where they face three main issues, namely 1) heterogeneity, 2) scalability, and 3) complexity. The proposed solution draws inspiration from the living world in terms of 1) evolutionary paradigms able to drive the adaptation process of autonomic services and 2) social paradigms for the provisioning of the necessary cooperation mechanisms. The net result is the introduction of autonomic self-evolving services that are able to adapt to localized needs and conditions while ensuring the maintenance of a purposeful system. Such a system requires scalable support from the communication standpoint. In networking terms, this results in the introduction of a two-tier architecture based on localized opportunistic exchanges of information. The presented approach is able to achieve better scalability properties when compared to more conventional communication approaches.
BIONETS: Bio-Inspired Networking for Pervasive Communication Environments
Chlamtac, Imrich;
2007-01-01
Abstract
This paper presents BIONETS, which is a novel bio-inspired approach to the design of localized services in pervasive communication/computing environments. Conventional networking approaches are not suitable for such scenarios, where they face three main issues, namely 1) heterogeneity, 2) scalability, and 3) complexity. The proposed solution draws inspiration from the living world in terms of 1) evolutionary paradigms able to drive the adaptation process of autonomic services and 2) social paradigms for the provisioning of the necessary cooperation mechanisms. The net result is the introduction of autonomic self-evolving services that are able to adapt to localized needs and conditions while ensuring the maintenance of a purposeful system. Such a system requires scalable support from the communication standpoint. In networking terms, this results in the introduction of a two-tier architecture based on localized opportunistic exchanges of information. The presented approach is able to achieve better scalability properties when compared to more conventional communication approaches.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione