Description
SPRINGER Field-Based Coordination For Pervasive Multiagent Systems by FRANCO ZAMBONELLI
More and more, software systems involve autonomous and distributed software components that have to execute and interact in open and dynamic environments, such as in pervasive, autonomous, and mobile applications. The requirements with respect to dynamics, openness, scalability, and decentralization call for new approaches to software design and development, capable of supporting spontaneous configuration, tolerating partial failures, or arranging adaptive reorganization of the whole system.Inspired by the behaviour of complex natural systems, scientists and engineers have started to adjust their mechanisms and techniques for self-organization and adaption to changing environments. In line with these considerations, Mamei and Zambonelli propose an interaction model inspired by the way masses and particles in our universe move and self-organize according to contextual information represented by gravitational and electromagnetic fields. The key idea is to have the components' actions driven by computational force fields, generated by the components themselves or by some infrastructures, and propagated across the environment. Together with its supporting middleware infrastructure - available with additional information under http://www.agentgroup.unimore.it - this model can serve as the basis for a general purpose and widely applicable approach for the design and development of adaptive distributed applications. 1) IntroductionPart I: The Scenario2) Upcoming Information Technology Scenarios3) The Role of Coordination and The Inadequacy of Current ApproachesPart II: Modeling Field-Based Coordination4) Field-Based Coordination5) Co-Fields and Motion CoordinationPart III: Implementing Field-Based Coordination6) Commercial Off The Shelf Implementations7) Tuples on The AirPart IV: Advanced Applications8) Content-Based Information Access and Coordination9) Self-Assembly in Mobile and Modular Robots10) The Cloak of Invisibility11) ConclusionsReferences, Index