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2010

publication

Examining learner control in a structured inquiry cycle using process mining

Authored by Larry Howard, Julie Johnson, and Carin Neitzel
publication

Analysis of productive learning behaviors in a structured inquiry cycle using hidden Markov models

Authored by H. Joeng, Gautam Biswas, Julie Johnson, and Larry Howard
publication

New Developments in Model-Integrated Development of High-Confidence Software

Authored by Joseph Porter, Graham Hemingway, Nicholas Kottenstette, Harmon Nine, Chris vanBuskirk, Gabor Karsai, and Janos Sztipanovits

2009

publication

Wireless Mesh Network Routing Under Uncertain Demands

Authored by Jonathan Wellons, Liang Dai, Bin Chang, and Yuan Xue
publication

Wireless Acoustic Emission Sensor Network for Structural Monitoring

The paper presents a prototype wireless system for the detection of active fatigue cracks in aging railways bridges in real-time. The system is based on a small low-cost sensor node, called an AEPod, that has four acoustic emission (AE) channels and a strain channel for sensing, as well as the capability to communicate in a wireless fashion with other nodes and a base station. AEPods are placed at fracture-critical bridge locations. The strain sensor detects oncoming traffic and triggers the AEPod out of its hibernation mode. As the train stresses the fracture-critical member, acoustic emission and strain data are acquired. The data are compressed and filtered at the AEPod and transmitted off the bridge using cell-phone communication.
Authored by Akos Ledeczi, Thomas Hay, Peter Volgyesi, Robert Hay, Andras Nadas, and Subash Jayaraman
publication

Tracking in Urban Environments Using Sensor Networks Based on Audio-Video Fusion

Authored by Manish Kushwaha, Songhwai Oh, Isaac Amundson, Xenofon Koutsoukos, and Akos Ledeczi
publication

Templatized Model Transformations: Enabling Reuse in Model Transformations

Authored by Amogh Kavimandan, Aniruddha Gokhale, Gabor Karsai, and Jeff Gray
publication

Semantics of Domain Specific Modeling Languages

Authored by Ethan Jackson, Ryan Thibodeaux, Joseph Porter, and Janos Sztipanovits
publication

Reconfigurable architecture for building intelligent learning environments

Authored by J. Linn, J. Sagedy, H. Jeong, B. Podgursky, and G. Biswas
publication

Promoting self-regulated learning skills in agent-based learning environments

Authored by G. Biswas, R. Roscoe, H. Jeong, and B. Sulcer
publication

Multi-Agent Systems for the Real World

To support real world applications, a multi-agent system must deal with all relevant issues from the environment, the problem, the users and the technological infrastructure. The real world introduces restrictions and noise at all levels. The communication network may provide intermittent connectivity, variable latency and limited bandwidth. Devices have limited computation. The world is uncertain and dynamic. Tasks, resources and the team objective can change. The software may give incorrect advice. Users can make errors and initiate unplanned actions.
Authored by Rajiv Maheswaran, Craig Rogers, Romeo Sanchez, Pedro Szekely, Gergely Gati, Kevin Smyth, and Chris vanBuskirk
publication

A Model-Integrated Guideline-Driven Clinical Decision Support System

Using evidence-based guidelines to standardize the care of patients with complex medical problems is a difficult challenge. In acute care settings, such as intensive care units, the inherent problems of stabilizing and improving vital patient parameters is complicated by the division of responsibilities among different healthcare team members. Computerized support for implementing such guidelines has tremendous potential. The use of model-integrated techniques for specifying and implementing guidelines as coordinated asynchronous processes is a promising new methodology for providing advanced clinical decision support. Combined with visual dashboards, which show the status of the implemented guidelines, a new approach to computer-supported care is possible. The Vanderbilt Medical Center is applying these techniques to the management of sepsis.
Authored by Janos Mathe, Jason Martin, Peter Miller, Akos Ledeczi, Liza Weavind, Andras Nadas, Anne Miller, David Maron, and Janos Sztipanovits
publication

Interactive Metacognition: Monitoring and Regulating a Teachable Agent

Authored by D. Schwartz, C. Chase, D. Chin, M. Oppezzo, H. Kwong, S. Okita, G. Biswas, R. Roscoe, H. Jeong, and J. Wagster
publication

Formalizing the Structural Semantics of Domain-Specific Modeling Languages

Authored by Ethan Jackson and Janos Sztipanovits
publication

Delay Management in Wireless Networks

Authored by Wenbo He, Yuan Xue, and Klara Nahrstedt
publication

Compensating for Timing Jitter in Computing Systems with General-Purpose Operating Systems

Fault-tolerant frameworks for large scale computing clusters require sensor programs, which are executed periodically to facilitate performance and fault management. By construction, these clusters use general purpose operating systems such as Linux that are built for best average case performance and do not provide deterministic scheduling guarantees. Consequently, periodic applications show jitter in execution times relative to the expected execution time. Obtaining a deterministic schedule for periodic tasks in general purpose operating systems is difficult without using kernel-level modifications such as RTAI and RTLinux. However, due to performance and administrative issues kernel modification cannot be used in all scenarios. In this paper, we address the problem of jitter compensation for periodic tasks that cannot rely on modifying the operating system kernel. ; Towards that, (a) we present motivating examples; (b) we present a feedback controller based approach that runs in the user space and actively compensates periodic schedule based on past jitter; This approach is platform-agnostic i.e. it can be used in different operating systems without modification; and (c) we show through analysis and experiments that this approach is platform-agnostic i.e. it can be used in different operating systems without modification and also that it maintains a stable system with bounded total jitter.
Authored by Abhishek Dubey, Gabor Karsai, and Sherif Abdelwahed
publication

Communication in Automation, including networking and wireless,

An introduction to the fundamental issues and limitations of communication and networking in automation is given. Digital communication fundamentals are reviewed and networked control systems together with teleoperation are discussed. Issues in both wired and wireless networks are presented.
Authored by Nicholas Kottenstette, Panos Antsaklis, and Simon Nof
publication

Automatic Domain Model Migration to Manage Metamodel Evolution

Authored by Anantha Narayanan, Tihamer Levendovszky, Daniel Balasubramanian, and Gabor Karsai
publication

Acoustic Source Localization and Discrimination in Urban Environments

Authored by Manish Kushwaha, Xenofon Koutsoukos, Peter Volgyesi, and Akos Ledeczi
publication

On Scalability of Proximity-Aware P2P Streaming

Authored by Liang Dai, Yanchuan Cao, Yi Cui, and Yuan Xue
publication

RF Bearing Estimation in Wireless Sensor Networks

This paper introduces a novel method for bearing estimation based on a rotating antenna generating a Doppler shifted RF signal. The small frequency change can be measured even on low cost resource constrained nodes using a radio interferometric technique introduced previously. Measuring the Doppler shift at two known locations provides a bearing estimate to the rotating node. An alternative approach employing a switched antenna array is proposed that provides improved robustness by avoiding moving parts.
Authored by Akos Ledeczi, Janos Sallai, and Peter Volgyesi
publication

Model-based Software Design Tools for the Cell Processor

This paper introduces the larger features of the Cell Processor that allow this specialized hardware architecture to provide a significant amount of increased performance. Specialized configurations call for specialized programming in order to harness the available performance increase. Such high computation configurations are prime targets for signal processing applications. There exists a tool set for modeling the dataflow of a signal processing application. A major goal exists to allow for generation of code to be used on the Cell. The first step involves learning the required techniques for programming by way of porting an example application to the Cell. This paper shows the first steps of utilizing the multi-core architecture which yields a significant increase in performance with room for further improvement in the future.
Authored by Nicholas Lowell
publication

Intelligent Resource Management and Dynamic Adaptation in a Distributed Real-time and Embedded Sensor Web System

Sensor webs are often composed of servers connected to distributed real-time embedded (DRE) systems that operate in open environments where operating conditions, workload, resource availability, and connectivity cannot be accurately characterized a priori. The South East Alaska MOnitoring Network for Science, Telecommunications, Education, and Research (SEAMONSTER) project exhibits many common system management and dynamic operation challenges for effective, autonomous system adaptation in a representative sensor web. These challenges cover both field operation (e.g., power management through system sleep/wake cycles and reaction to local environmental changes) and server operation (e.g., system adaptation for new/modified goals, resource allocation for a changing set of applications, and configuration changes for fluctuating workload). This paper presents the results of integrating and applying quality-of-service (QoS)-enabled component middleware, dynamic resource management, and autonomous agent technologies to address these challenges in SEAMONSTER.
Authored by John Kinnebrew, William Otte, Nishanth Shankaran, Gautam Biswas, and Douglas Schmidt
publication

A Graphical Model Approach to Source Localization in Wireless Sensor Networks

Collaborative localization and discrimination of multiple acoustic sources is an important problem in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). Localization approaches can be categorized as signal-based and feature-based methods. The signal-based methods are not suitable for collaborative localization in WSNs because they require transmission of raw acoustic data. In feature-based methods, signal features are extracted at each sensor and the localization is done by multisensor fusion of the extracted features. Such methods are suitable for WSNs due to their lower bandwidth requirements. In this paper, we present a feature-based localization and discrimination approach for multiple harmonic acoustic sources in WSNs. The approach uses acoustic beamform and Power Spectral Density (PSD) data from each sensor as the features for multisensor fusion, localization, and discrimination. We use a graphical model to formulate the problem, and employ maximum likelihood and Bayesian estimation for estimating the position of the sources as well as their fundamental and dominant harmonic frequencies. We present simulation and experimental results for source localization and discrimination, to demonstrate our approach. In our simulations, we also relax the source assumptions, specifically the harmonic and omnidirectional source assumptions, and evaluate the effect on localization accuracy. The experimental results are obtained using motes equipped with microphone arrays and an onboard FPGA for computing the beamform and the PSD.
Authored by Manish Kushwaha and Xenofon Koutsoukos
publication

A Flexible Infrastructure for Distributed Deployment in Adaptive Sensor Webs

Distributed sensor Webs typically operate in dynamic environments where operating conditions, transient phenomena, availability of resources, and network connection quality change frequently and unpredictably. Often these changes can neither be completely anticipated nor accurately described during development or deployment. Our prior work has described how we developed agents and services that are capable of monitoring these changing conditions and adapting system parameters using the CORBA component model (CCM) deployment infrastructure as part of the multiagent architecture for coordinated responsive observations (MACRO) platform. Our recent application of MACRO to the South East Alaska monitoring network for Science, Telecommunications, Education, and Research (SEAMONSTER) project has identified new distributed deployment infrastructure challenges common to computationally constrained field environments in adaptive sensor Webs. These challenges include standardized execution of low-level hardware-dependent actions and on-going data tasks, automated provisioning of agents for heterogeneous field hardware, and minimizing deployment infrastructure overhead. This paper describes how we extended MACRO to address these sensor Web challenges by creating an action/effector framework standardizing the execution of lightweight actions and providing for automated provisioning of MACRO agents, in addition to footprint optimizations to the underlying CCM infrastructure.
Authored by William Otte, John Kinnebrew, Douglas Schmidt, and Gautam Biswas

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