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With the rapid expansion of the Internet over the last 20 years,
event-based distributed systems are playing an increasingly
important role in a broad range of application domains, including
enterprise management, environmental monitoring, information
dissemination, finance, pervasive systems, autonomic computing,
collaborative working and learning, and geo-spatial systems. Many
different architectures, languages and technologies are being used
for implementing event-based distributed systems, and much of the
development has been undertaken independently by different
communities. However, a common factor is an ever-increasing
complexity. Users and developers expect that such systems are able
not only to handle large volumes of simple events but also to
detect complex patterns of events that may be spatially distributed
and may span significant periods of time. Intelligent and
logic-based approaches provide sound foundations for addressing
many of the research challenges faced and this book covers a broad
range of recent advances, contributed by leading experts in the
field. It presents a comprehensive view of reasoning in event-based
distributed systems, bringing together reviews of the state-of-the
art, new research contributions, and an extensive set of
references. It will serve as a valuable resource for students,
faculty and researchers as well as industry practitioners
responsible for new systems development.
With the rapid expansion of the Internet over the last 20 years,
event-based distributed systems are playing an increasingly
important role in a broad range of application domains, including
enterprise management, environmental monitoring, information
dissemination, finance, pervasive systems, autonomic computing,
collaborative working and learning, and geo-spatial systems. Many
different architectures, languages and technologies are being used
for implementing event-based distributed systems, and much of the
development has been undertaken independently by different
communities. However, a common factor is an ever-increasing
complexity. Users and developers expect that such systems are able
not only to handle large volumes of simple events but also to
detect complex patterns of events that may be spatially distributed
and may span significant periods of time. Intelligent and
logic-based approaches provide sound foundations for addressing
many of the research challenges faced and this book covers a broad
range of recent advances, contributed by leading experts in the
field. It presents a comprehensive view of reasoning in event-based
distributed systems, bringing together reviews of the state-of-the
art, new research contributions, and an extensive set of
references. It will serve as a valuable resource for students,
faculty and researchers as well as industry practitioners
responsible for new systems development.
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