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Section: New Results

Pervasive Computing

Participants : Laurent Ciarletta [contact] , Olivier Festor, Ye-Qiong Song, Yannick Presse, Emmanuel Nataf.

Vincent Chevrier, Thomas Navarrete Gutierrez and Julien Vaubourg (MAIA team) did contribute to part of this activity.

In Pervasive or Ubiquitous Computing, a growing number of communicating/computing devices are collaborating to provide users with enhanced and ubiquitous services in a seamless way. In a related field, Cyber Physical Systems also are technological systems that have to be considered within a physical world and its contraints. They are complex systems where several inter-related phenomena have to be considered. In order to be studied, modeled and evaluated, we propose the use of co-simulation and multimodeling.

Pervasive Computing is about interconnected and situated computing resources providing us(ers) with contextual services. These systems, embedded in the fabric of our daily lives, are complex: numerous interconnected and heterogeneous entities are exhibiting a global behavior impossible to forecast by merely observing individual properties. Firstly, users physical interactions and behaviors have to be considered. They are influenced and influence the environment. Secondly, the potential multiplicity and heterogeneity of devices, services, communication protocols, and the constant mobility and reorganization also need to be addressed. Our research on this field is going towards both closing the loop between humans and systems, physical and computing systems, and taming the complexity, using multi-modeling (to combine the best of each domain specific model) and co-simulation (to design, develop and evaluate) as part of a global conceptual and practical toolbox. We're applying this work on UAvs, dynamic networks (adhoc, mesh, P2P, wireless sensors and actuators), energy-constrained / location aware services, smart grids etc.

Such systems can be seen as complex and are present everywhere in our environment: internet, electricity distribution networks, transport networks. This systems have as characteristics: a large number of autonomous entities, dynamic structures, different time and space scales and emergent phenomena.

Application domains such as Smart Spaces, Smart Cities, Smart Trasportation Systems and Smart Grid makes us sometimes use Smart* or SmartX as a generic word. Madynes is focusing on the networking aspects of such systems and on the tools to develop and assess them. We cooperate with other teams and most notably the Maia team to be able to encompass issues and research questions that combine both networking and cognitive aspects.

In 2013 we worked on the following research topics :