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A Socio-ecological Model for Advanced Service Discovery in Machine-to-Machine Communication Networks.pdf (1.45 MB)

A socioecological model for advanced service discovery in machine-to-machine communication networks

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-31, 09:31 authored by Lu Liu, Nick Antonopoulos, Minghui Zheng, Yongzhao Zhan, Zhijun Ding
The new development of embedded systems has the potential to revolutionize our lives and will have a significant impact on future Internet of Thing (IoT) systems if required services can be automatically discovered and accessed at runtime in Machine-to-Machine (M2M) communication networks. It is a crucial task for devices to perform timely service discovery in a dynamic environment of IoTs. In this article, we propose a Socioecological Service Discovery (SESD) model for advanced service discovery in M2M communication networks. In the SESD network, each device can perform advanced service search to dynamically resolve complex enquires and autonomously support and co-operate with each other to quickly discover and self-configure any services available in M2M communication networks to deliver a real-time capability. The proposed model has been systematically evaluated and simulated in a dynamic M2M environment. The experiment results show that SESD can self-adapt and self-organize themselves in real time to generate higher flexibility and adaptability and achieve a better performance than the existing methods in terms of the number of discovered service and a better efficiency in terms of the number of discovered services per message.

History

Citation

ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems, 15 (2), article 38. https://doi.org/10.1145/2811264

Author affiliation

School of Informatics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems

Volume

15

Issue

2

Pagination

1 - 26

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

issn

1539-9087

eissn

1558-3465

Copyright date

2016

Language

en

Publisher version

https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2811264

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