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Section: New Results

Multi-modeling and co-simulation tools for the evaluation and development of Smart* and other Pervasive Computing systems

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

Vincent Chevrier (Maia team, LORIA) is a collaborator and the correspondant for the MS4SG project, Benjamin Camus, Victorien Elvinger and Christine Bourjot (Maia team, LORIA) are collaborators for the AA4MM. Julien Vaubourg's PhD is under the co-direction of V. Chevrier and L. Ciarletta.

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.

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 proposed the AA4MM meta-model [51] that solves the core challenges of multimodeling and simulation coupling in an homogeneous perspective. In AA4MM, we chose a multi-agent point of view: a multi-model is a society of models; each model corresponds to an agent and coupling relationships correspond to interaction between agents. In the MS4SG projet which involves MAIA, Madynes and EDF R&D on smart-grid simulation, we developed a proof of concepts for a smart-appartment case[12] .

In 2014 we worked on the following research topics:

In 2015, we will continue working on the hybrid protocols and on the UAV platform, and apply our co-simulation work to Smart Grids and other Smart*.