Service Discovery with Personal Awareness in Smart Environments
-
Published:2014
Issue:
Volume:
Page:86-107
-
ISSN:2328-1316
-
Container-title:Creating Personal, Social, and Urban Awareness through Pervasive Computing
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:
Author:
Opasjumruskit Kobkaew1, Expósito Jesús1, König-Ries Birgitta1, Nauerz Andreas2, Welsch Martin3
Affiliation:
1. Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany 2. IBM Germany Research and Development GmbH, Germany 3. Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany & IBM Germany Research and Development GmbH, Germany
Abstract
Web service descriptions with Semantic Web annotations can be exploited to automate dynamic discovery of services. The approaches introduced aim at enabling automatic discovery, configuration, and execution of services in dynamic environments. In this chapter, the authors present the service discovery aspect of MERCURY, a platform for straightforward, user-centric integration and management of heterogeneous devices and services via a Web-based interface. In the context of MERCURY, they use service discovery to find appropriate sensors, services, or actuators to perform a certain functionality required within a user-defined scenario (e.g., to obtain the temperature at a certain location, book a table at a restaurant close to the location of all friends involved, etc.). A user will specify a service request, which will be fed to a matchmaker, which compares the request to existing service offers and ranks these offers based on how well they match the service request. In contrast to existing works, the service discovery approach the authors use is geared towards non-IT-savvy end users and is not restricted to single service-description formalism. Moreover, the matchmaking algorithm should be user-aware and environmentally adaptive (e.g. depending on the user’s location or surrounding temperature), rather than specific to simple keywords-based searches, which depend on the users’ expertise and mostly require several tries. Hence, the goal is to develop a service discovery module on top of existing techniques, which will rank discovered services to serve users’ queries according to their personal interests, expertise, and current situations.
Reference39 articles.
1. Blake, M. B., Bleul, S., Weise, T., Bansal, A., & Kona, S. (2009). Web services challenge. Retrieved February 21, 2013, from http://ws-challenge.georgetown.edu/wsc09 2. Semantic Web Services 3. Bo, C., Xiuquan, Q., Budan, W., Xiaokun, W., Ruisheng, S., & Junliang, C. (2012). RESTful web service mashup based coal mine safety monitoring and control automation with wireless sensor network. Paper presented at IEEE 19th International Conference on Web Services (ICWS), (pp. 620-622). IEEE. 4. The Social Semantic Web 5. Christensen, E., Curbera, F., Meredith, G., & Weerawarana, S. (2001). Web services description language (WSDL). Retrieved February 21, 2013, from http://www.w3.org/TR/wsdl
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|