Self-Adaptive Software First International Workshop, IWSAS 2000 Oxford, UK, April 17–19, 2000 Revised Papers / [electronic resource] : edited by Paul Robertson, Howie Shrobe, Robert Laddaga. - Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. - VIII, 252 p. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1936 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1936 .

Introduction: The First International Workshop on Self-Adaptive Software -- Active Software -- Continuous Self-Evaluation for the Self-Improvement of Software -- Active Trust Management for Autonomous Adaptive Survivable Systems (ATM’s for AAss’s) -- Towards Semantics of Self-Adaptive Software -- On Evaluating Self-Adaptive Software -- Mapping an Application to a Control Architecture: Specification of the Problem -- Transient Management in Reconfigurable Systems -- Model-Integrated Embedded Systems -- Coordination of View Maintenance Policy Adaptation Decisions: A Negotiation-Based Reasoning Approach -- Dynamic Self Adaptation in Distributed Systems -- Imposing Real-Time Constraints on Self-Adaptive Controller Synthesis -- Software Mode Changes for Continuous Motion Tracking -- Port-Based Adaptable Agent Architecture -- An Architecture for Self-Adaptation and Its Application to Aerial Image Understanding -- Self-Adaptive Multi-sensor Systems -- Results of the First International Workshop on Self Adaptive Software.

Self-adaptive software evaluates its own behavior and changes its behavior when the evaluation indicates that the software does not accomplish what it is intended to do or when better functionality or better performance is possible. The self-adaptive approach in software engineering builds on well-known features like the use of errors and the handling of exceptions in languages like Lisp or Java and aims at improving the robustness of software systems by gradually adding new features of self-adaption and autonomity. This book originates from the First International Workshop on Self-Adaptive Software, IWSAS 2000, held in Oxford, UK in April 2000. The revised full papers presented in the volume together with an introductory survey by the volume editors assess the state of the art in this emerging new field and set the scene for future research and development work.

9783540445845

10.1007/3-540-44584-6 doi


Computer science.
Computer Communication Networks.
Software engineering.
Logic design.
Artificial intelligence.
Computer Science.
Software Engineering.
Logics and Meanings of Programs.
Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics).
Computer Communication Networks.
Special Purpose and Application-Based Systems.

QA76.758

005.1
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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