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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Principles for Designing Accessible Health Applications for Older Adults

Gomez Enriquez, Diego 23 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
2

High Performance Content Centric Networking on Virtual Infrastructure

Tang, Tang 28 November 2013 (has links)
Content Centric Networking (CCN) is a novel networking architecture in which communication is resolved based on names, or descriptions of the data transferred instead of addresses of the end-hosts. While CCN demonstrates many promising potentials, its current implementation suffers from severe performance limitations. In this thesis we study the performance and analyze the bottleneck of the existing CCN prototype. Based on the analysis, a variety of design alternatives are proposed for realizing high performance content centric networking over virtual infrastructure. Preliminary implementations for two of the approaches are developed and evaluated on Smart Applications on Virtual Infrastructure (SAVI) testbed. The evaluation results demonstrate that our design is capable of providing scalable content centric routing solution beyond 1Gbps throughput under realistic traffic load.
3

High Performance Content Centric Networking on Virtual Infrastructure

Tang, Tang 28 November 2013 (has links)
Content Centric Networking (CCN) is a novel networking architecture in which communication is resolved based on names, or descriptions of the data transferred instead of addresses of the end-hosts. While CCN demonstrates many promising potentials, its current implementation suffers from severe performance limitations. In this thesis we study the performance and analyze the bottleneck of the existing CCN prototype. Based on the analysis, a variety of design alternatives are proposed for realizing high performance content centric networking over virtual infrastructure. Preliminary implementations for two of the approaches are developed and evaluated on Smart Applications on Virtual Infrastructure (SAVI) testbed. The evaluation results demonstrate that our design is capable of providing scalable content centric routing solution beyond 1Gbps throughput under realistic traffic load.
4

Runtime modelling for user-centric smart cyber-physical-human applications

Castañeda Bueno, Lorena 04 December 2017 (has links)
Cyber-Physical-Human Systems (CPHSs) are the integration, mostly focused on the interactions, of cyber, physical and humans elements that work together towards the achievement of the objectives of the system. Users continuously rely on CPHSs to fulfil personal goals, thus becoming active, relevant, and necessary components of the designed system. The gap between humans and technology is getting smaller. Users are increasingly demanding smarter and personalized applications, capable of understanding and acting upon changing situations. However, humans are highly dynamic, their decisions might not always be predictable, and they expose themselves to unforeseeable situations that might impact their interactions with their physical and cyber elements. The problem addressed in this dissertation is the support of CPHSs' user-centric requirements at runtime. Therefore, this dissertation focuses on the investigation of runtime models and infrastructures for: (1) understanding users, their personal goals and changing situations, (2) causally connecting the cyber, physical and human components involved in the achievement of users' personal goals, and (3) supporting runtime adaptation to respond to relevant changes in the users' situations. Situation-awareness and runtime adaptation pose significant challenges for the engineering of user-centric CPHSs. There are three challenges associated with situation-awareness: first, the complexity and dynamism of users' changing situations require specifications that explicitly connect users with personal goals and relevant context. Second, the achievement of personal goals entails comprehensive representations of user's tasks and sequences and measurable outcomes. Third, situation-awareness implies the analysis of context towards an understanding of users' changing conditions. Therefore, there is a need for representations and reasoning techniques to infer emerging situations. There are three challenges associated with runtime adaptation: first, the dynamic nature of CPHSs and users require runtime models to make explicit the components of CPHSs and their interactions. Second, the definition of architectural and functional requirements of CPHSs to support runtime user-centric awareness and adaptation. Finally, the design and implementation of runtime adaptation techniques to support dynamic changes in the specification of the CPHSs' runtime models. The four contributions of this dissertation add to the body of knowledge for the development of smart applications centred around the achievement of users' personal goals. First, we propose a definition and architectural design for the implementation of user-centric smart cyber-physical-human applications (UCSAs). Our design proposes a context-aware self-adaptive system supported by a runtime infrastructure to manage CRUD operations. Second, we propose two models at runtime (MARTs): (1) our Galapagos Metamodel, which defines the concepts of a UCSA; and (2) our Galapagos Model, which supports the specification of evolving tasking goals, personal interactions, and the relevant contexts. Third, we propose our operational framework, which defines model equivalences between human-readable and machine-readable, available runtime operations and semantics, to manage runtime operations on MARTs. Finally, we propose our processing infrastructure for models at runtime (PRIMOR), which is a component-based system responsible for providing reading access from software components to the MARTs, executing model-related runtime operations, and managing the propagation of changes among interconnected MARTs and their realities. To evaluate our contributions, we conducted a literature review of models and performed a qualitative analysis to demonstrate the novelty of our approach by comparing it with related approaches. We demonstrated that our models satisfy MARTs characteristics, therefore making them proper models at runtime. Furthermore, we performed an experimental analysis based on our case study on online grocery shopping for the elderly. We focused our analysis on the runtime operations specified in the framework as supported by the corresponding MART (accuracy and scalability), and our infrastructure to manage runtime operation and growing MARTs (performance). / Graduate
5

Surveillance Applications : Image Recognition on the Internet of Things

Rönnqvist, Patrik January 2013 (has links)
This is a B.Sc. thesis within the Computer Science programme at the Mid Sweden University. The purpose of this project has been to investigate the possibility of using image based surveillance in smart applications on the Internet-of-Things. The goals involved investigating relevant technologies and designing, implementing and evaluating an application that can perform image recognition. A number of image recognition techniques have been investigated and the use of color histograms has been chosen for its simplicity and low resource requirement. The main source of study material has been the Internet. The solution has been developed in the Java programming language, for use on the Android operating system and using the MediaSense platform for communication. It consists of a camera application that produces image data and a monitor application that performs image recognition and handles user interaction. To evaluate the solution a number of tests have been performed and its pros and cons have been identified. The results show that the solution can differentiate between simple colored stick figures in a controlled environment. Variables such as lighting and the background are significant. The application can reliably send images from the camera to the monitor at a rate of one image every four seconds. The possibility of using streaming video instead of images has been investigated but found to be difficult under the given circumstances. It has been concluded that while the solution cannot differentiate between actual people it has shown that image based surveillance is possible on the IoT and the goals of this project have been satisfied. The results were expected and hold little newsworthiness. Suggested future work involves improvements to the MediaSense platform and infrastructure for processing and storing data. / MediaSense

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