Scalable Multilateral Communication Technique for Large-Scale Information Systems

Khaled Ragab*, Naohiro Kaji, Koichi Moriyama, Kinji Mori

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Autonomous Community Information System (ACIS) is a proposition made to contend with the extreme dynamism in the large-scale information system. ACIS is a decentralized bilateral-hierarchy architecture that forms a community of individual end-users (community members) having the same interests and demands in somewhere, at specified time. It allows the community members to mutually cooperate and share information without loading up any single node excessively. In this paper, an autonomous decentralized community communication technique is proposed to assure a flexible, scalable and a multilateral communication among the community members. The main ideas behind this communication technique are: Content-code communication (community service-based) for flexibility and multilateral benefits communication for scalable and productive cooperation among members. All members communicate productively for the satisfaction of all the community members. The scalability of the system's response time regardless of the number of the community members has been shown by simulation. Thus, the autonomous decentralized community communication technique reveals great results of the response time with continuous increasing in the total number of members.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings - IEEE Computer Society's International Computer Software and Applications Conference
Pages222-227
Number of pages6
Publication statusPublished - 2003
Externally publishedYes
EventProceedings: 27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference, COMPSAC 2003 - Dallas, TX, United States
Duration: 2003 Nov 32003 Nov 6

Other

OtherProceedings: 27th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference, COMPSAC 2003
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityDallas, TX
Period03/11/303/11/6

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Software

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