skip to main content
10.1145/1529282.1529556acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PagessacConference Proceedingsconference-collections
research-article

A biochemical metaphor for developing eternally adaptive service ecosystems

Published: 08 March 2009 Publication History

Abstract

In the near future, pervasive sensing and actuating devices will densely populate our everyday environments, and will be tightly integrated with Telecom and Internet networks---also eventually contributing to blur their distinction.

References

[1]
O. Babaoglu, G. Canright, A. Deutsch, G. A. D. Caro, F. Ducatelle, L. M. Gambardella, N. Ganguly, M. Jelasity, R. Montemanni, A. Montresor, and T. Urnes. Design patterns from biology for distributed computing. ACM Trans. Auton. Adapt. Syst., 1(1): 26--66, 2006.
[2]
A. P. Barros and M. Dumas. The rise of web service ecosystems. IT Professional, 8(5): 31--37, 2006.
[3]
M. Casadei and M. Viroli. Applying self-organizing coordination to emergent tuple organization in distributed networks. In Second IEEE International Conference on Self-Adaptive and Self-Organizing Systems (SASO'08), pages 213--222, Venice, Italy, 20--24 Oct. 2008. IEEE Computer Society.
[4]
M. Mamei and F. Zambonelli. Field-based Coordination for Pervasive Multiagent Systems. Springer Verlag, 2006.
[5]
F. Zambonelli and M. Viroli. Architecture and metaphors for eternally adaptive service ecosystems. In Intelligent Distributed Computing, Systems and Applications, volume 162/2008 of Studies in Computational Intelligence, pages 23--32. Springer, 2008.

Cited By

View all

Recommendations

Comments

Information & Contributors

Information

Published In

cover image ACM Conferences
SAC '09: Proceedings of the 2009 ACM symposium on Applied Computing
March 2009
2347 pages
ISBN:9781605581668
DOI:10.1145/1529282
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

Sponsors

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 08 March 2009

Permissions

Request permissions for this article.

Check for updates

Qualifiers

  • Research-article

Conference

SAC09
Sponsor:
SAC09: The 2009 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
March 8, 2009 - March 12, 2008
Hawaii, Honolulu

Acceptance Rates

Overall Acceptance Rate 1,650 of 6,669 submissions, 25%

Upcoming Conference

SAC '25
The 40th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing
March 31 - April 4, 2025
Catania , Italy

Contributors

Other Metrics

Bibliometrics & Citations

Bibliometrics

Article Metrics

  • Downloads (Last 12 months)3
  • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
Reflects downloads up to 03 Jan 2025

Other Metrics

Citations

Cited By

View all

View Options

Login options

View options

PDF

View or Download as a PDF file.

PDF

eReader

View online with eReader.

eReader

Media

Figures

Other

Tables

Share

Share

Share this Publication link

Share on social media