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Lhopital, Sacha; Aknine, Samir; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Thavonekham, Vincent; Vu, Huan
Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study Proceedings Article
In: Bassiliades, Nick; Chalkiadakis, Georgios; Jonge, Dave (Ed.): Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers, pp. 20–36, Springer, 2021.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: DCOP, DPOP, Healthcare, IoT
@inproceedings{soton447983,
title = {Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study},
author = {Sacha Lhopital and Samir Aknine and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Vincent Thavonekham and Huan Vu},
editor = {Nick Bassiliades and Georgios Chalkiadakis and Dave Jonge},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/447983/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers},
volume = {12520 LNAI},
pages = {20–36},
publisher = {Springer},
abstract = {ensuremath<pensuremath>We present a novel approach to the management of notifications from devices in a healthcare setting. We employ a distributed constraint optimisation (DCOP) approach to the delivery of notification for healthcare assistants that aims to preserve the privacy of patients while reducing the intrusiveness of such notifications. Our approach reduces the workload of the assistants and improves patient safety by automating task allocation while ensuring high priority needs are addressed in a timely manner. We propose and evaluate several DCOP models both in simulation and in real-world deployments. Our models are shown to be efficient both in terms of computation and communication costs.ensuremath</pensuremath>},
keywords = {DCOP, DPOP, Healthcare, IoT},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Balsamo, Domenico; Merrett, Geoff V.; Zaghari, Bahareh; Wei, Yang; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Stein, Sebastian; Weddell, Alexander; Beeby, Stephen
Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges Proceedings Article
In: 25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks, 2017.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: autonomous computing, human collectives, IoT, Smart cities, wearable computing
@inproceedings{soton414077b,
title = {Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges},
author = {Domenico Balsamo and Geoff V. Merrett and Bahareh Zaghari and Yang Wei and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Sebastian Stein and Alexander Weddell and Stephen Beeby},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/414077/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-09-01},
booktitle = {25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks},
abstract = {The promise of smart cities offers the potential to change the way we live, and refers to the integration of IoT systems for people-centred applications, together with the collection and processing of data, and associated decision making. Central to the realization of this are wearable and autonomous computing systems. There are considerable challenges that exist in this space that require research across different areas of electronics and computer science; it is this multidisciplinary consideration that is novel to this paper. We consider these challenges from different perspectives, involving research in devices, infrastructure and software. Specifically, the challenges considered are related to IoT systems and networking, autonomous computing, wearable sensors and electronics, and the coordination of collectives comprising human and software agents.},
keywords = {autonomous computing, human collectives, IoT, Smart cities, wearable computing},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Lhopital, Sacha; Aknine, Samir; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Thavonekham, Vincent; Vu, Huan
Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study Proceedings Article
In: Bassiliades, Nick; Chalkiadakis, Georgios; Jonge, Dave (Ed.): Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers, pp. 20–36, Springer, 2021.
@inproceedings{soton447983,
title = {Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study},
author = {Sacha Lhopital and Samir Aknine and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Vincent Thavonekham and Huan Vu},
editor = {Nick Bassiliades and Georgios Chalkiadakis and Dave Jonge},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/447983/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers},
volume = {12520 LNAI},
pages = {20–36},
publisher = {Springer},
abstract = {ensuremath<pensuremath>We present a novel approach to the management of notifications from devices in a healthcare setting. We employ a distributed constraint optimisation (DCOP) approach to the delivery of notification for healthcare assistants that aims to preserve the privacy of patients while reducing the intrusiveness of such notifications. Our approach reduces the workload of the assistants and improves patient safety by automating task allocation while ensuring high priority needs are addressed in a timely manner. We propose and evaluate several DCOP models both in simulation and in real-world deployments. Our models are shown to be efficient both in terms of computation and communication costs.ensuremath</pensuremath>},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Balsamo, Domenico; Merrett, Geoff V.; Zaghari, Bahareh; Wei, Yang; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Stein, Sebastian; Weddell, Alexander; Beeby, Stephen
Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges Proceedings Article
In: 25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks, 2017.
@inproceedings{soton414077b,
title = {Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges},
author = {Domenico Balsamo and Geoff V. Merrett and Bahareh Zaghari and Yang Wei and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Sebastian Stein and Alexander Weddell and Stephen Beeby},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/414077/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-09-01},
booktitle = {25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks},
abstract = {The promise of smart cities offers the potential to change the way we live, and refers to the integration of IoT systems for people-centred applications, together with the collection and processing of data, and associated decision making. Central to the realization of this are wearable and autonomous computing systems. There are considerable challenges that exist in this space that require research across different areas of electronics and computer science; it is this multidisciplinary consideration that is novel to this paper. We consider these challenges from different perspectives, involving research in devices, infrastructure and software. Specifically, the challenges considered are related to IoT systems and networking, autonomous computing, wearable sensors and electronics, and the coordination of collectives comprising human and software agents.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Lhopital, Sacha; Aknine, Samir; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Thavonekham, Vincent; Vu, Huan
Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study Proceedings Article
In: Bassiliades, Nick; Chalkiadakis, Georgios; Jonge, Dave (Ed.): Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers, pp. 20–36, Springer, 2021.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: DCOP, DPOP, Healthcare, IoT
@inproceedings{soton447983,
title = {Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study},
author = {Sacha Lhopital and Samir Aknine and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Vincent Thavonekham and Huan Vu},
editor = {Nick Bassiliades and Georgios Chalkiadakis and Dave Jonge},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/447983/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers},
volume = {12520 LNAI},
pages = {20–36},
publisher = {Springer},
abstract = {ensuremath<pensuremath>We present a novel approach to the management of notifications from devices in a healthcare setting. We employ a distributed constraint optimisation (DCOP) approach to the delivery of notification for healthcare assistants that aims to preserve the privacy of patients while reducing the intrusiveness of such notifications. Our approach reduces the workload of the assistants and improves patient safety by automating task allocation while ensuring high priority needs are addressed in a timely manner. We propose and evaluate several DCOP models both in simulation and in real-world deployments. Our models are shown to be efficient both in terms of computation and communication costs.ensuremath</pensuremath>},
keywords = {DCOP, DPOP, Healthcare, IoT},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Balsamo, Domenico; Merrett, Geoff V.; Zaghari, Bahareh; Wei, Yang; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Stein, Sebastian; Weddell, Alexander; Beeby, Stephen
Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges Proceedings Article
In: 25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks, 2017.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: autonomous computing, human collectives, IoT, Smart cities, wearable computing
@inproceedings{soton414077b,
title = {Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges},
author = {Domenico Balsamo and Geoff V. Merrett and Bahareh Zaghari and Yang Wei and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Sebastian Stein and Alexander Weddell and Stephen Beeby},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/414077/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-09-01},
booktitle = {25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks},
abstract = {The promise of smart cities offers the potential to change the way we live, and refers to the integration of IoT systems for people-centred applications, together with the collection and processing of data, and associated decision making. Central to the realization of this are wearable and autonomous computing systems. There are considerable challenges that exist in this space that require research across different areas of electronics and computer science; it is this multidisciplinary consideration that is novel to this paper. We consider these challenges from different perspectives, involving research in devices, infrastructure and software. Specifically, the challenges considered are related to IoT systems and networking, autonomous computing, wearable sensors and electronics, and the coordination of collectives comprising human and software agents.},
keywords = {autonomous computing, human collectives, IoT, Smart cities, wearable computing},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Lhopital, Sacha; Aknine, Samir; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Thavonekham, Vincent; Vu, Huan
Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study Proceedings Article
In: Bassiliades, Nick; Chalkiadakis, Georgios; Jonge, Dave (Ed.): Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers, pp. 20–36, Springer, 2021.
@inproceedings{soton447983,
title = {Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study},
author = {Sacha Lhopital and Samir Aknine and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Vincent Thavonekham and Huan Vu},
editor = {Nick Bassiliades and Georgios Chalkiadakis and Dave Jonge},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/447983/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers},
volume = {12520 LNAI},
pages = {20–36},
publisher = {Springer},
abstract = {ensuremath<pensuremath>We present a novel approach to the management of notifications from devices in a healthcare setting. We employ a distributed constraint optimisation (DCOP) approach to the delivery of notification for healthcare assistants that aims to preserve the privacy of patients while reducing the intrusiveness of such notifications. Our approach reduces the workload of the assistants and improves patient safety by automating task allocation while ensuring high priority needs are addressed in a timely manner. We propose and evaluate several DCOP models both in simulation and in real-world deployments. Our models are shown to be efficient both in terms of computation and communication costs.ensuremath</pensuremath>},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Balsamo, Domenico; Merrett, Geoff V.; Zaghari, Bahareh; Wei, Yang; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Stein, Sebastian; Weddell, Alexander; Beeby, Stephen
Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges Proceedings Article
In: 25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks, 2017.
@inproceedings{soton414077b,
title = {Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges},
author = {Domenico Balsamo and Geoff V. Merrett and Bahareh Zaghari and Yang Wei and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Sebastian Stein and Alexander Weddell and Stephen Beeby},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/414077/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-09-01},
booktitle = {25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks},
abstract = {The promise of smart cities offers the potential to change the way we live, and refers to the integration of IoT systems for people-centred applications, together with the collection and processing of data, and associated decision making. Central to the realization of this are wearable and autonomous computing systems. There are considerable challenges that exist in this space that require research across different areas of electronics and computer science; it is this multidisciplinary consideration that is novel to this paper. We consider these challenges from different perspectives, involving research in devices, infrastructure and software. Specifically, the challenges considered are related to IoT systems and networking, autonomous computing, wearable sensors and electronics, and the coordination of collectives comprising human and software agents.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Multi-agent signal-less intersection management with dynamic platoon formation
AI Foundation Models: initial review, CMA Consultation, TAS Hub Response
The effect of data visualisation quality and task density on human-swarm interaction
Demonstrating performance benefits of human-swarm teaming
Lhopital, Sacha; Aknine, Samir; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Thavonekham, Vincent; Vu, Huan
Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study Proceedings Article
In: Bassiliades, Nick; Chalkiadakis, Georgios; Jonge, Dave (Ed.): Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers, pp. 20–36, Springer, 2021.
@inproceedings{soton447983,
title = {Decentralised control of intelligent devices: a healthcare facility study},
author = {Sacha Lhopital and Samir Aknine and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Vincent Thavonekham and Huan Vu},
editor = {Nick Bassiliades and Georgios Chalkiadakis and Dave Jonge},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/447983/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Multi-Agent Systems and Agreement Technologies - 17th European Conference, EUMAS 2020, and 7th International Conference, AT 2020, Revised Selected Papers},
volume = {12520 LNAI},
pages = {20–36},
publisher = {Springer},
abstract = {ensuremath<pensuremath>We present a novel approach to the management of notifications from devices in a healthcare setting. We employ a distributed constraint optimisation (DCOP) approach to the delivery of notification for healthcare assistants that aims to preserve the privacy of patients while reducing the intrusiveness of such notifications. Our approach reduces the workload of the assistants and improves patient safety by automating task allocation while ensuring high priority needs are addressed in a timely manner. We propose and evaluate several DCOP models both in simulation and in real-world deployments. Our models are shown to be efficient both in terms of computation and communication costs.ensuremath</pensuremath>},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Balsamo, Domenico; Merrett, Geoff V.; Zaghari, Bahareh; Wei, Yang; Ramchurn, Sarvapali; Stein, Sebastian; Weddell, Alexander; Beeby, Stephen
Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges Proceedings Article
In: 25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks, 2017.
@inproceedings{soton414077b,
title = {Wearable and autonomous computing for future smart cities: open challenges},
author = {Domenico Balsamo and Geoff V. Merrett and Bahareh Zaghari and Yang Wei and Sarvapali Ramchurn and Sebastian Stein and Alexander Weddell and Stephen Beeby},
url = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/414077/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-09-01},
booktitle = {25th International Conference on Software, Telecommunications and Computer Networks},
abstract = {The promise of smart cities offers the potential to change the way we live, and refers to the integration of IoT systems for people-centred applications, together with the collection and processing of data, and associated decision making. Central to the realization of this are wearable and autonomous computing systems. There are considerable challenges that exist in this space that require research across different areas of electronics and computer science; it is this multidisciplinary consideration that is novel to this paper. We consider these challenges from different perspectives, involving research in devices, infrastructure and software. Specifically, the challenges considered are related to IoT systems and networking, autonomous computing, wearable sensors and electronics, and the coordination of collectives comprising human and software agents.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}