DocumentCode :
1446623
Title :
Expert Discovery and Interactions in Mixed Service-Oriented Systems
Author :
Schall, Daniel ; Skopik, Florian ; Dustdar, Schahram
Author_Institution :
Distrib. Syst. Group, Vienna Univ. of Technol., Vienna, Austria
Volume :
5
Issue :
2
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
233
Lastpage :
245
Abstract :
Web-based collaborations and processes have become essential in today´s business environments. Such processes typically span interactions between people and services across globally distributed companies. Web services and SOA are the defacto technology to implement compositions of humans and services. The increasing complexity of compositions and the distribution of people and services require adaptive and context-aware interaction models. To support complex interaction scenarios, we introduce a mixed service-oriented system composed of both human-provided and Software-Based Services (SBSs) interacting to perform joint activities or to solve emerging problems. However, competencies of people evolve over time, thereby requiring approaches for the automated management of actor skills, reputation, and trust. Discovering the right actor in mixed service-oriented systems is challenging due to scale and temporary nature of collaborations. We present a novel approach addressing the need for flexible involvement of experts and knowledge workers in distributed collaborations. We argue that the automated inference of trust between members is a key factor for successful collaborations. Instead of following a security perspective on trust, we focus on dynamic trust in collaborative networks. We discuss Human-Provided Services (HPSs) and an approach for managing user preferences and network structures. HPS allows experts to offer their skills and capabilities as services that can be requested on demand. Our main contributions center around a context-sensitive trust-based algorithm called ExpertHITS inspired by the concept of hubs and authorities in web-based environments. ExpertHITS takes trust-relations and link properties in social networks into account to estimate the reputation of users.
Keywords :
Web services; business data processing; groupware; inference mechanisms; service-oriented architecture; social networking (online); trusted computing; ubiquitous computing; ExpertHITS; HPS; SBS; SOA; Web services; Web-based collaborations; adaptive interaction models; automated inference; business environments; context-aware interaction models; context-sensitive trust-based algorithm; defacto technology; distributed collaborations; dynamic trust; expert discovery; globally distributed companies; human-provided services; mixed service-oriented systems; network structures; security perspective; social networks; software-based services; user preferences; Business; Collaboration; Computational modeling; Context; Humans; Software; Taxonomy; Human-provided services; crowdsourcing; hubs and authorities.; service-oriented expertise provisioning; social trust;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Services Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1939-1374
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TSC.2011.2
Filename :
5710867
Link To Document :
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