DocumentCode
3422941
Title
UNNOTI: Toolkit for Rural Service Modeling
Author
Deb, Debzani ; Chaki, Nabendu ; Ghose, Aditya
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of Calcutta, Kolkata, India
fYear
2012
fDate
12-15 Dec. 2012
Firstpage
115
Lastpage
123
Abstract
Services science aims towards suggesting methodological and tool support for managing services for various application scenarios. In this paper, it is demonstrated that the services science vision can be realized by using formal modeling and analysis techniques for the design of functionality of any kind, irrespective of the context whether such functionality is delivered on computing platforms or by humans. The service management problem is discussed in rather an unusual context of rural service management in developing nations. This choice of domain is motivated by two factors. The fact that such a domain is rarely referred in existing literature, it presents greater modeling and analysis challenges. The success of the proposed methodology in such context would pave the way towards applying the same to any other services setting. Besides, success in this domain can have significant social impact. Three specific results are documented in this paper. First, it is demonstrated how rural service architectures can be effectively modeled. Second, it is proposed how a QoS monitoring infrastructure might be devised for this domain (addressing special challenges, such as the need to reliably estimate component measures from more aggregated measures). Lastly, it is discussed how sophisticated QoS monitoring (leveraging techniques from complex event processing) can be used to trigger, and constrain, service redesign, leading to an integrated service design life-cycle. In addition this paper introduces UNNOTI, a simple and effective online form based toolkit for Service modeling, QoS monitoring, and service redesign which manages a repository of service designs, and the custom-designed functionality for QoS monitoring and estimation, as well as service proximity analysis, the tool uses the Prover9 first-order logic theorem prover for performing the goal realization test that is required for service redesign. The toolkit developed for modeling agricultural procurement service- and can be applicable to model other rural services. The toolkit is developed using JSP and MYSQL in Windows environment.
Keywords
formal verification; quality of service; social aspects of automation; theorem proving; JSP; MYSQL; Prover9 first-order logic theorem prover; QoS estimation; QoS monitoring infrastructure; UNNOTI; Windows environment; agricultural procurement service modeling; complex event processing; component measures; custom-designed functionality; developing nations; formal analysis techniques; formal modeling techniques; functionality design; goal realization test; integrated service design life-cycle; online form based toolkit; rural service architectures; rural service management; rural service modeling toolkit; service design repository; service management problem; service proximity analysis; service redesign; service science vision; social impact; tool support; Agriculture; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Machinery; Monitoring; Quality of service; Silicon; Service Management; Service modeling; Service redesign;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Services in Emerging Markets (ICSEM), 2012 Third International Conference on
Conference_Location
Mysore
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5729-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSEM.2012.23
Filename
6468187
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