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Adaptive, Dynamic, and Resilient SystemsEdited By Niranjan Suri View larger

Adaptive, Dynamic, and Resilient SystemsEdited By Niranjan Suri

M00002469

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ISBN 9780367378608
Published September 19, 2019 by Auerbach Publications
378 Pages

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$56.99

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As the complexity of today’s networked computer systems grows, they become increasingly difficult to understand, predict, and control. Addressing these challenges requires new approaches to building these systems. Adaptive, Dynamic, and Resilient Systems supplies readers with various perspectives of the critical infrastructure that systems of networked computers rely on. It introduces the key issues, describes their interrelationships, and presents new research in support of these areas.

The book presents the insights of a different group of international experts in each chapter. Reporting on recent developments in adaptive systems, it begins with a survey of application fields. It explains the requirements of such fields in terms of adaptation and resilience. It also provides some abstract relationship graphs that illustrate the key attributes of distributed systems to supply you with a better understanding of these factors and their dependencies.

The text examines resilient adaptive systems from the perspectives of mobile, infrastructure, and enterprise systems and protecting critical infrastructure. It details various approaches for building adaptive, dynamic, and resilient systems—including agile, grid, and autonomic computing; multi-agent-based and biologically inspired approaches; and self-organizing systems.

The book includes many stories of successful applications that illustrate a diversified range of cutting-edge approaches. It concludes by covering related topics and techniques that can help to boost adaptation and resilience in your systems.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Modeling Adaptive Software Systems. Service-Oriented Software Engineering Lifecycles. On Measuring Resilience in Command and Control Architectures. Resiliency and Robustness of Complex Systems and Networks. Resilient and Adaptive Networked Systems. Bringing Adaptiveness and Resilience to e-Health. Agile Computing. A Pattern-Based Architectural Style for Self-Organizing Software Systems. Adaptation and Resilience of Self-Organizing Electronic Institutions. Assessing the Resilience of Self-Organizing Systems. Leveraging ICT to Enable e-Maintenance for Automated Machines. Using Planning to Adapt to Dynamic Environments. Policy-Based Governance of Complex Distributed Systems. Adaptive and Resilient Computational Resource Allocation Inspired by Economics. Instrumentation-Based Resource Control.

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Editor(s)

Biography

Niranjan Suri is a research scientist at the Florida Institute for Human & Machine Cognition (IHMC) and also a visiting scientist at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, Maryland. He received his Ph.D. in computer science from Lancaster University, England, and his M.Sc. and B.Sc. in computer science from the University of West Florida, Pensacola. His current research activity is focused on the notion of agile computing, which supports the opportunistic discovery and exploitation of resources in highly dynamic networked environments. His other research interests include coordination algorithms, distributed systems, networking, communication protocols, virtual machines, and software agents.

Giacomo Cabri
received the Laurea degree in computer science engineering from the University of Bologna in July 1995. In February 2000 he received the PhD in information engineering from the Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Ingegneria of the Universita di Modena e Reggio Emilia. He received a research contract by the Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Ingegneria of the Universita di Modena e Reggio Emilia, from January 1, 2001, to October 31, 2001. From November 1, 2001, to December 20, 2006, he was a research associate at the Facolta di Ingegneria of the Universita degli studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia, SSD ING-INF/05, position confirmed from November 1, 2004. From December 21, 2006, he has been an Associate Professor, SSD ING-INF/05 and his affiliation is the Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche, Informatiche e Matematiche of the Universita di Modena e Reggio Emilia. He teaches different courses in the field of computer science and information technology, both basic ones and advanced ones. His research activities are mainly related to the following areas:







Agents: base models and coordination protocols

Autonomic computing

Web applications

Mobile computing



In these areas, he