Design issues in implementing a cooperative search among heterogeneous agents to aid information management

Author(s):  
P.G. CHANDER ◽  
T. RADHAKRISHNAN ◽  
R. SHINGHAL

Searching for information is an ubiquitous need in today's data-oriented environments. However, a request for search often entails the service and cooperation of tools managing a diversified set of tasks. In this article, we explore how tools in the form of cooperating agents can be deployed for information management. We describe an agent framework called GAME (goal-oriented, agent-managed environment), and focus on how GAME agents search cooperatively for information requested by a user. Cooperative search entails several issues such as coordinating agent activities, maintaining transparency to agent heterogeneity, and designing information formats to be shared among the agents that require examination. This article analyzes these issues and describes how they are handled in the GAME framework. Cooperative search effectively supports collaboration and information sharing not only among agents in a domain, but also among GAME agents developed across domains. We illustrate the application of cooperative search in task-oriented domains such as Manufacturing and Front Office showing how GAME promotes intradomain and interdomain collaboration in a Factory environment.

2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 1641-1646
Author(s):  
Chen Feng ◽  
Chen Zhang ◽  
Jian Cang Xie ◽  
Ni Wang

For achieving the management and monitoring platform of dynamic water rights based on grid technology, According to the theories of water rights, water market and the basic principles of software technology. Through the framework and structural analysis, hierarchical analysis and task analysis combining the rich program language, Constructing the thinking of system's portal and dispatch center. Achieve the platform's main functions of information management and user management. Solve effectively water rights information sharing and idle resources allocation and utilization of real-time problems. Increased information sharing and scientific configuration in the transfer of dynamic water rights. Provided a base platform for realizing information management of water rights and water markets.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeyoung Hah

BACKGROUND As the US health care system is embracing data-driven care, personal health information (PHI) has become a valuable resource for various health care stakeholders. In particularly, health consumers are expected to autonomously manage and share PHI with their health care partners. To date, there have been mixed views on the factors influencing individuals’ health data–sharing behaviors. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to identify a key factor to better understand health information sharing behavior from a health consumer’s perspective. We focused on daily settings, wherein health data–sharing behavior becomes a part of individuals’ daily information management activities. Considering the similarity between health and finance information management, we explicitly examined whether health consumers’ daily habit of similar data sharing from the financial domain affects their PHI-sharing behaviors in various scenarios. METHODS A Web-based survey was administered to US health consumers who have access to and experience in using the internet. We collected individual health consumers’ intention to share PHI under varying contexts, habit of financial information management (operationalized as internet banking [IB] use in this paper), and the demographic information from the cross-sectional Web-based survey. To isolate the effect of daily IB on PHI-sharing behaviors in everyday contexts, propensity score matching was used to estimate the average treatment effect (ATE) and average treatment effect on the treated (ATET) regarding IB use. We balanced the treatment and control groups using caliper matching based on the observed confounding variables (ie, gender, income, health status, and access to primary care provider), all of which resulted in a minimal level of bias between unmatched and matched samples (bias &lt;5%). RESULTS A total of 339 responses were obtained from a cross-sectional Web-based survey. The ATET results showed that in terms of sharing contents, those who used IB daily were more likely to share general information (<italic>P</italic>=.01), current information (<italic>P</italic>=.003), and entire data (<italic>P</italic>=.04). Regarding occasions for sharing occasions, IB users were prone to share their information in all cases (<italic>P</italic>=.02). With regard to sharing recipients, daily IB users were more willing to share their personal health data with stakeholders who were not directly involved in their care, such as health administrators (<italic>P</italic>=.05). These results were qualitatively similar to the ATE results. CONCLUSIONS This study examined whether daily management of similar information (ie, personal financial information) changes health consumers’ PHI-sharing behavior under varying sharing conditions. We demonstrated that daily financial information management can encourage health information sharing to a much broader extent, in several instances, and with many stakeholders. We call for more attention to this unobserved daily habit driven by the use of various nonhealth technologies, all of which can implicitly affect patterns and the extent of individuals’ PHI-sharing behaviors.


Author(s):  
Osvandre Alves Martins ◽  
Denis Silva Loubach ◽  
Giovani Volnei Meinerz ◽  
Adilson Marques da Cunha

One of the most notable concepts related to the future cooperative Air Traffic Management (ATM) is the Collaborative Decision Making (CDM). This new management philosophy of using collaborative technologies and procedures to enable ATM partners drives efforts towards the common goals of sharing and exchanging information. To support the implementation of CDM, a likely solution was found in the context of System of Systems (SoS), system integration, and interoperability. Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) principles and technologies were recognized as one of the best alternatives to allow this implementation. Within this architecture, the System Wide Information Management (SWIM) has been developed on the last decade, and SWIM applications will be accessible to all ATM partners on the next decade by providing full airspace information, updated in real-time by all involved partners. This chapter presents an overview of key elements in information sharing for ATM and explains how SOA, SWIM, Aeronautical Information Management (AIM) and CDM support each other development.


Author(s):  
Rudy Manganelli ◽  
Francesco Chinello ◽  
Alessandro Formaglio ◽  
Domenico Prattichizzo

AbstractThis paper deals with controller design issues for a neurosurgical teleoperator system. The specific application of interest consists of remotely inserting a linear-stage rigid endoscope into the patient's brain for microinvasive neurosurgery interventions. This work aims at evaluating advantages and drawbacks of using a general-purpose control architecture versus a simpler task-oriented architecture, from a point of view of stability and transparency. Experiments revealed that in spite of its simplicity, the task-oriented design allows an improvement in the trade-off between performance, transparency and stability requirements.


2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith S. Evans ◽  
Quinn Weninger

2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiko Borchert

This article focuses on the information requirements of public and private stakeholders engaged in critical infrastructure protection (CIP).With its emphasis on information management rather than information sharing, the article builds on existing research suggesting that the notion of information sharing inadvertently renders cooperation more difficult as it evokes impressions of information “dominance” rather than joint information ownership. The article proposes a joint public-private information management agenda based on core issues providing actionable information to tackle immediate threats and crosscutting issues looking at the long-term issues that are relevant to understand the overall context in which critical infrastructure development occurs.


2014 ◽  
Vol 543-547 ◽  
pp. 2706-2710
Author(s):  
Qing Fang Zhou ◽  
Si Gui Xu

The application scheme of Campus Smart Card System is analyzed, and its design aim and development principle of the functional modules are introduced. campus smart card system on 3G technology which is one of the important parts in campus digitalization. It offers comprehensive data collection and excellent information sharing environment. Its realization will promote the information management of the school and increase construction process of digital campus.


Author(s):  
Mohamed Daassi ◽  
Nabila Jawadi ◽  
Marc Favier ◽  
Michel Kalika

This chapter investigates the role of e-leaders in building and maintaining collective awareness within virtual teams. The authors examine the effects of behavioral leadership orientation on collective awareness building. The study explores the bi-dimensional structure of both collective awareness and leader behavior orientation. According to this conceptualization, activity-awareness is linked to task-oriented behaviors of e-leaders. Activities related to goal clarification, coordination and work monitoring are expected to provide more visibility regarding team members’ actions and their contribution to work completion. At the same time, social awareness is developed through the e-leaders’ relation-oriented behaviors. The development of aspects related to interpersonal relationships such as trust, cohesion, and conflict management reduce uncertainty regarding the behavior of team members. Interviews conducted with 12 members of two virtual teams confirm the authors’ theoretical development and emphasize information management as a key managerial practice for e-leaders to build collective awareness.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document