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Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems David G. Schwartz

Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems By David G. Schwartz

Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems by David G. Schwartz


Summary

It has become clear that to take knowledge-based systems to their next useful level, it is necessary to get independent knowledge-based systems to work together, much as we put together ad hoc work groups in our organizations to tackle complex problems.

Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems Summary

Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems by David G. Schwartz

Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems provides an in-depth introduction to the issues and techniques surrounding the integration and control of diverse and independent software components. Organizations increasingly rely upon diverse computer systems to perform a variety of knowledge-based tasks. This presents technical issues of interoperability and integration, as well as philosophical issues of how cooperation and interaction between computational entities is to be realized. Cooperating systems are systems that work together towards a common end. The concepts of cooperation must be realized in technically sound system architectures, having a uniform meta-layer between knowledge sources and the rest of the system. The layer consists of a family of interpreters, one for each knowledge source, and meta-knowledge. A system architecture to integrate and control diverse knowledge sources is presented. The architecture is based on the meta-level properties of the logic programming language Prolog. An implementation of the architecture is described, a Framework for Logic Programming Systems with Distributed Execution (FLiPSiDE).
Knowledge-based systems play an important role in any up-to-date arsenal of decision support tools. The tremendous growth of computer communications infrastructure has made distributed computing a viable option, and often a necessity in geographically distributed organizations. It has become clear that to take knowledge-based systems to their next useful level, it is necessary to get independent knowledge-based systems to work together, much as we put together ad hoc work groups in our organizations to tackle complex problems.
The book is for scientists and software engineers who have experience in knowledge-based systems and/or logic programming and seek a hands-on introduction to cooperating systems. Researchers investigating autonomous agents, distributed computation, and cooperating systems will find fresh ideas and new perspectives on well-established approaches to control, organization, and cooperation.

Table of Contents

List of Figures. List of Tables. Preface. Part I: Foundations. 1. Introduction. 2. Blackboard Systems. 3. Cooperation in Organizations. 4. Meta4: Knowledge, Architecture, Programs and Control. Part II: Creations. 5. FLiPSiDE: a Framework for Logic Programming Systems with Distributed Execution. 6. A Meta-Layer for Knowledge Sources. 7. Knowledge Source Integration. 8. Control of Knowledge Sources. 9. BlackLog: FliPSiDE as a Process-Oriented Prolog. Part III: Evaluations. 10. A CDPS Analysis of FLiPSiDE. 11. Related Work. 12. Conclusions. References. Index.

Additional information

NPB9780792395355
9780792395355
0792395352
Cooperating Heterogeneous Systems by David G. Schwartz
New
Hardback
Springer
1994-11-30
203
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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