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SHRACK: A SELF-ORGANIZING PEER-TO-PEER SYSTEM FOR DOCUMENT SHARING AND TRACKING

Given a set of peers with overlapping interests where each peer wishes to keep track
of new documents that are relevant to their interests, we propose Shrack-a self-organizing
peer-to-peer (P2P) system for document sharing and tracking. The goal
of a document-tracking system is to disseminate new documents as they are published.
We present a framework of Shrack and propose a gossip-like pull-only information dissemination
protocol. We explore and develop mechanisms to enable a self-organizing
network, based on common interest of document sets among peers.
Shrack peers collaboratively share new documents of interest with other peers.
Interests of peers are modeled using relevant document sets and are represented as
peer profiles. There is no explicit pro file exchange between peers and no global
information available. We describe how peers create their user pro files, discover the
existence of other peers, locally learn about interest of other peers, and finally form
a self-organizing overlay network of peers with common interests. Unlike most existing P2P file sharing systems which serve their users by finding
relevant documents based on an instant query, Shrack is designed to help users that
have long-term interests to keep track of relevant documents that are newly available
in the system. The framework can be used as an infrastructure for any kind of
documents and data, but in this thesis, we focus on research publications.
We built an event-driven simulation to evaluate the performance and behaviour of
Shrack. We model simulated users associated with peers after a subset of authors in
the ACM digital library metadata collection. The experimental results demonstrate
that the Shrack dissemination protocol is scalable as the network size increases. In
addition, self-organizing overlay networks, where connections between peers are based
on common interests as captured by their associated document sets, can help improve
the relevance of documents received by peers in terms of F-score over random peer
networks. Moreover, the resulting self-organizing networks have the characteristics of
social networks.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:NSHD.ca#10222/12814
Date23 April 2010
CreatorsTanta-ngai, Hathai
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish

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