Academic literature on the topic 'Interaction protocol'

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Journal articles on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Juneja, Dimple, Chetali Dhiman, Savneet Monga, and Ashutosh Kumar Singh. "Compendious Study of Interaction Protocols in Multiagent Systems." International Journal of Engineering & Technology 7, no. 3.8 (July 7, 2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.14419/ijet.v7i3.8.15208.

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The premise of the paper is to present a compendious study of interaction protocols pertaining to multiagent systems. Multiagent systems have evolved from the field of Distributed Artificial Intelligence and require numerous agents to cooperate and coordinate to cope with goal search. The primary ingredients to goal search are the language of communication and the interaction protocol. Agents in communication must be able to understand the language of communication and should also follow rules of interaction. The paper focuses on sharing understanding about various agent interaction protocols and it also discusses the promises and challenges each protocol offers to MAS research community.
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Ronald, Nicole, Theo Arentze, and Harry Timmermans. "The Effects of Different Interaction Protocols in Agent-Based Simulation of Social Activities." International Journal of Agent Technologies and Systems 3, no. 2 (April 2011): 18–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jats.2011040102.

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Decision making in models of activity and travel behaviour is usually individual-based and focuses on outcomes rather than the decision process. Using agent-based modelling techniques and incorporating interaction protocols into the model can assist in modelling decision-making in more detail. This paper describes an agent-based model of social activity generation and scheduling, in which utility-based agents interact with each other to schedule activities. Six different protocols are tested. The authors show that the model outcomes reflect minor changes in the protocol, while changing the order of the protocol leads to significantly different outcomes, hence the protocol plays a large role in the simulation results and should be studied in more detail.
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Ignatenko, O. P., and O. A. Molchanov. "Evolutionary games in TCP networks with speed restriction policies." PROBLEMS IN PROGRAMMING, no. 4 (December 2016): 033–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/pp2016.04.033.

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Competitive development of various versions of network protocols is an essential part of computer networks. The most-used protocol today is Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). There is a large number of implementations of the TCP protocol, which differ by mechanism of congestion control. TCP develops by improving its existent implementations, vanishing some of them and via creation of a new ones. The possibility of using new versions of the protocol allows the user to increase the data rate by selecting the appropriate implementation of TCP. It is difficult to predict consequences of computer network users’ interaction in situations when many users try to achieve higher data rate by applying different TCP implementation. The actual task is to develop a theoretical and program tools to model such competitive dynamic interactions. This is the goal of my scientific-research work. Game theory, which is the theory of mathematical models of optimal decision making in situations of conflicts of interest, is the best suited to solve a particular problem because it allows you to find a solution in terms of non-cooperative interaction, which usually happens between the networks TCP-connections. This paper examines the possibility of coexistence of different implementations of protocols that users can change to improve their own capacity. It also examines games between protocols in cases when users’ packets management policies are applied.
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Romanchenko, Alexander Mikhailovitch. "Generalized Structural Metamodel of Information Interaction Protocol." SPIIRAS Proceedings 1, no. 38 (February 24, 2015): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.15622/sp.38.4.

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Vadde, K. K., V. R. Syrotiuk, and D. C. Montgomery. "Optimizing protocol interaction using response surface methodology." IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing 5, no. 6 (June 2006): 627–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tmc.2006.82.

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Ardissono, Liliana, Roberto Furnari, Giovanna Petrone, and Marino Segnan. "Interaction protocol mediation in web service composition." International Journal of Web Engineering and Technology 6, no. 1 (2010): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijwet.2010.034758.

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Smith, John, Dana Kay Smith, and Eileen Kupstas. "Automated Protocol Analysis." Human-Computer Interaction 8, no. 2 (June 1, 1993): 101–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15327051hci0802_2.

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Zelenka, Tomas, and Charalampos Spilianakis. "HiChIP and Hi-C Protocol Optimized for Primary Murine T Cells." Methods and Protocols 4, no. 3 (July 16, 2021): 49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps4030049.

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The functional implications of the three-dimensional genome organization are becoming increasingly recognized. The Hi-C and HiChIP research approaches belong among the most popular choices for probing long-range chromatin interactions. A few methodical protocols have been published so far, yet their reproducibility and efficiency may vary. Most importantly, the high frequency of the dangling ends may dramatically affect the number of usable reads mapped to valid interaction pairs. Additionally, more obstacles arise from the chromatin compactness of certain investigated cell types, such as primary T cells, which due to their small and compact nuclei, impede limitations for their use in various genomic approaches. Here we systematically optimized all the major steps of the HiChIP protocol in T cells. As a result, we reduced the number of dangling ends to nearly zero and increased the proportion of long-range interaction pairs. Moreover, using three different mouse genotypes and multiple biological replicates, we demonstrated the high reproducibility of the optimized protocol. Although our primary goal was to optimize HiChIP, we also successfully applied the optimized steps to Hi-C, given their significant protocol overlap. Overall, we describe the rationale behind every optimization step, followed by a detailed protocol for both HiChIP and Hi-C experiments.
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Pokussov, V. V. "Formalization and determination of the protocol correctness for information and technical interaction (on the example of integrated information security system)." Informatization and communication, no. 2 (February 16, 2021): 55–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.34219/2078-8320-2021-12-2-55-68.

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The article deals with the problem of designing protocols for information and technical interaction, which have a sign of correctness. For this, its model is built in graphical and analytical form, as well as using a modified adjacency matrix. A classification of modules participating in the interaction is proposed, namely the following: terminal sensor and executor, degenerate handler, object storage, intermediate handler. Five correctness requirements for the protocol are introduced: the need and sufficiency of exchange objects, input and output terminality of modules, and their involvement. For each of the requirements, a formal definition is given - in terms of an adjacency matrix, as well as an algorithm for their verification. The synthesized requirements and algorithms are used for the author›s protocol of information and technical interaction in an integrated information security system. As a result, the correctness of the protocol is proved.
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Xiong, PengCheng, Calton Pu, and Mengchu Zhou. "Protocol-Level Service Composition Mismatches." International Journal of Web Services Research 7, no. 4 (October 2010): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jwsr.2010100101.

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Protocol-level mismatch is one of the most important problems in service composition. The state-of-the-art method to deal with protocol mismatch is to generate adaptors to check deadlock-freeness based on a reachability graph. When this property is violated, the generation process will repeat itself until no deadlock state is found; however, the main drawback of this method is that it does not take into account the future deadlock state and requires many interactions with a developer. In this regard, it suffers from low efficiency. In this paper, the authors model multiple web service interaction with a Petri net called Composition net (C-net). The protocol-level mismatch problem is transformed into the empty siphon problem of a C-net. The authors take future deadlock states into consideration through this model, while finding the optimal solution that involves fewest interactions with a developer. The proposed method is proved to achieve higher efficiency for resolving protocol-level mismatch issues than traditional ones.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Cantero, Gustavo Adolfo Agudelo. "Methodological assessment of the Critical Thermal Maximum (CTmax) of anuran larvae: interaction among the experimental heating rates, ontogeny and body mass." Universidade de São Paulo, 2016. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/41/41135/tde-21022017-095612/.

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Thermal limits for ectothermic animals displays a picture of the range of body temperatures that is tolerable by individuals before their locomotory capacity is impaired. However, thermal limits are not fixed and specific traits, but labile ones subjected to plastic adjustments and evolutionary change, and also are influenced by intrinsic and extrinsic factors of organisms, as well as by methodological factors inherent to experimental protocols. Even more, the influences of these factors on thermal limits have been commonly addressed independently in different taxa, and the extent by which multiple factors interact and affect thermal limits within taxa is poorly understood. Thus, the main aim of this work was to conduct a methodological assessment of the Critical Thermal Maximum (CTmax) by studying the influences of different experimental heating rates (ΔT’s), ontogeny, body mass, and the interaction among these factors on this trait. This matter was addressed on larvae of Physalaemus nattereri and Hypsiboas pardalis, two anuran species from the São Paulo State, southeastern Brazil, that differ in their phylogenetic background, ecological and life-history characteristics and inhabit environments with different thermal regimes. First, ΔT’s did affect averages and variances of CTmax in a species-specific manner. In addition, it was found a ΔT-dependent decreasing in CTmax at the end of metamorphosis in tadpoles of P. nattereri, because only the metamorphosing tadpoles exposed to the acute ΔT were more sensitive to high temperature than premetamorphic tadpoles. Finally, body mass and ΔT’s interacted on the CTmax of both species along our experimental design. In P. nattereri, body mass affected CTmax through physiology at the slow ΔT’s, whereas in H. pardalis body mass affected CTmax at the acute ΔT through a methodological artifact driven by higher thermal inertia in the group of large tadpoles. This study revealed that ΔT’s, ontogeny and body mass interact on the CTmax of our studied species, and these interactive effects could not have been elucidated by the independent study of each factor. It also highlights the importance of integrating the factors that influence thermal limits of ectothermic animals, especially in the context of climate change
Os limites térmicos para animais ectotérmicos mostram uma imagem do intervalo de temperaturas corporais que é tolerável pelos indivíduos antes de sua capacidade locomotora ser prejudicada. Porém, os limites térmicos não são características fixas e específicas, mas traços lábeis sujeitos tanto a ajustes plásticos quanto a mudanças evolutivas, e são influenciados por fatores intrínsecos e extrínsecos dos organismos, e também por fatores metodológicos associados aos protocolos experimentais. Ainda mais, as influências desses fatores sobre os limites térmicos têm sido comumente abordadas de forma independente em diferentes espécies, e o grau pelo qual múltiplos fatores interagem e afetam os limites térmicos dentro das espécies é pouco compreendido. Assim, o principal objetivo deste trabalho foi conduzir uma avaliação metodológica da Temperatura Crítica Máxima (CTmax) estudando as influências de diferentes taxas de aquecimento experimental (ΔT’s), ontogenia, massa corpórea e a interação entre esses fatores sobre esta característica fisiológica. Este assunto foi abordado em larvas de Physalaemus nattereri e Hypsiboas pardalis, dois espécies de anfíbios anuros encontrados no Estado de São Paulo, sudeste do Brasil, que diferem em sua origem filogenética, características ecológicas e de história de vida, e também habitam ambientes com diferentes regimes térmicos. Primeiro, foi encontrado que as ΔT’s afetaram tanto os valores médios quanto as variâncias da CTmax em ambas as espécies de maneira específica. Além disso, achou-se uma diminuição em CTmax no final da metamorfose que foi dependente da ΔT em larvas de P. nattereri, dado que nessa espécie só os girinos em metamorfose que foram expostos à ΔT aguda foram mais sensíveis às altas temperaturas do que os girinos premetamórficos. Finalmente, a massa corpórea e as ΔT’s interagiram sobre a CTmax em ambas as espécies ao longo do desenho experimental. Em P. nattereri, o efeito da massa corpórea sobre a CTmax foi fisiológico nas ΔT’s lentas, enquanto que em H. pardalis o efeito da massa corpórea na ΔT aguda foi devido a um artefato metodológico causado por maior inércia térmica no grupo de girinos maiores. Este estudo revelou que as ΔT’s, a ontogenia e a massa corpórea interagem sobre a CTmax das espécies estudadas, e estes efeitos interativos não poderiam ter sido elucidados pelo estudo independente de cada fator. Também é salientada a importância de integrar os fatores que influenciam os limites térmicos dos animais ectotérmicos, especialmente no contexto das mudanças climáticas
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Chunangad, Narayanaswamy Ganesh. "On the Interaction of High-Performance Network Protocol Stacks with Multicore Architectures." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32113.

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Multicore architectures have been one of the primary driving forces in the recent rapid growth in high-end computing systems, contributing to its growing scales and capabilities. With significant enhancements in high-speed networking technologies and protocol stacks which support these high-end systems, a growing need to understand the interaction between them closely is realized. Since these two components have been designed mostly independently, there tend to have often serious and surprising interactions that result in heavy asymmetry in the effective capability of the different cores, thereby degrading the performance for various applications. Similarly, depending on the communication pattern of the application and the layout of processes across nodes, these interactions could potentially introduce network scalability issues, which is also an important concern for system designers.

In this thesis, we analyze these asymmetric interactions and propose and design a novel systems level management framework called SIMMer (Systems Interaction Mapping Manager) that automatically monitors these interactions and dynamically manages the mapping of processes on processor cores to transparently maximize application performance. Performance analysis of SIMMer shows that it can improve the communication performance of applications by more than twofold and the overall application performance by 18%. We further analyze the impact of contention in network and processor resources and relate it to the communication pattern of the application. Insights learnt from these analyses can lead to efficient runtime configurations for scientific applications on multicore architectures.
Master of Science

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Cornwell, Jeffrey M. "The Interaction of Sire Fertility and Timing of AI in a Synchronization Protocol." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42357.

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The objectives of this study were to determine if fixed-timed artificial insemination (FTAI) at two different times, 0 or 24 h after GnRH administration, in a Presynch-Ovsynch protocol influenced the pregnancy rate (PR) when average and high fertility sires were used. Additionally, a second experiment was conducted to determine the effectiveness of CIDR inserts to allow for resynchronization of estrus in cows that did not conceive or maintain the conceptus at FTAI. Lactating Holstein cows (n = 1,457) from two well-managed dairy herds located in the piedmont region of North Carolina were utilized for 12 mo. First artificial insemination (AI) PR differed for fertility group and was 24.1 and 29.2% for average and high fertility group, respectively. Timing of AI did not influence first AI PR and there was no interaction of fertility group and timing of AI. Cows that received a CIDR insert were detected more frequently in estrus during a 4 d period, d 21 to 24, than control cows, 92.5 and 62.0%, respectively. However, the CIDR insert did not increase the detection of estrus compared to control cows over a normal estrus return interval of 7 d, 18 to 24 d after GnRH administration of a FTAI protocol, 28.8 and 34.2% respectively. In conclusion, the use of high fertility sires is a practical recommendation for improving first AI PR and CIDR inserts allowed more cows to be detected in estrus during a shorter interval, but did not increase the estrus detection rate during a normal estrus return interval.
Master of Science
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Li, Zheng, and n/a. "A pattern-based approach to the specification and validation of web services interactions." Swinburne University of Technology, 2007. http://adt.lib.swin.edu.au./public/adt-VSWT20070618.115228.

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Web services are designed for composition and use by third parties through dynamic discovery. As such, the issue of interoperability between services is of great importance to ensure that the services can work together towards the overall application goals. In particular, the interaction protocols of a service need to be implemented and used properly so that the service composition can conduct itself in an orderly fashion. There have been significant research efforts in providing rich descriptions for Web services, which includes their behaviour properties. When describing the interaction process/protocols of a service, most of them adopt a procedural or programming style approach. We argue that this style of description for service interactions is not natural to publishing service behaviour properties from the viewpoint of facilitating third-party service composition and analysis. Especially when dealing with service with diverse behaviour, the limit of these procedural approaches become apparent. In this thesis, we introduce a lightweight, pattern/constraint-based declarative approach that better supports the specification and use of service interaction properties in the service description and composition process. This approach uses patterns to describe the interaction behaviour of a service as a set of constraints. As such, it supports the incremental description of a service's interaction behaviour from the service developer's perspective, and the easy understanding and analysis of the interaction properties from the service user's perspective. It has been incorporated into OWL-S for service developers to describe service interaction constraints. We also present a framework and the related tool support for monitoring and checking the conformance of the service's runtime interactions against its specified interaction properties, to test whether the service is used properly and whether the service fulfils its behavioural obligations. The tool involves interception of service interactions/messages, representation of interaction constraints using finite state automata and finite state machine, and conformance checking of service interactions against interaction constraints. As such, we provide a useful tool for validating the implementation and use of services regarding their interaction behaviour.
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Alfredsson, Stefan. "A Cross-Layer Perspective on Transport Protocol Performance in Wireless Networks." Doctoral thesis, Karlstads universitet, Avdelningen för datavetenskap, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-9572.

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Communication by wireless technologies has seen a tremendous growth in the last decades. Mobile phone technology and wireless broadband solutions are rapidly replacing the last-hop wireline connectivity for telephones and Internet access.  Research has, however, shown that Internet traffic can experience a performance degradation over wireless compared to wired networks.  The inherent properties of radio communication lead to a higher degree of unreliability, compared to communication by wire or fiber.  This can result in an increased amount of transmission errors, packet loss, delay and delay variations, which in turn affect the performance of the main Internet transport protocols TCP and UDP.  This dissertation examines the cross-layer relationship between wireless transmission and the resulting performance on the transport layer. To this end, experimental evaluations of TCP and UDP over a wireless 4G downlink system proposal are performed.  The experiment results show, in a holistic scenario, that link-level adaptive modulation, channel prediction, fast persistent link retransmissions, and channel scheduling, enables the transport protocols TCP and UDP to perform well and utilize the wireless link efficiently.  Further, a novel approach is proposed where a modified TCP receiver can choose to accept packets that are corrupted by bit errors. Results from network emulation experiments indicate that by accepting and acknowledging even small amounts of corrupted data, a much higher throughput can be maintained compared to standard TCP.
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Bergwik, Emil. "Using the DIAL Protocol for Zero Configuration Connectivity in Cross-Platform Messaging." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Interaktiva och kognitiva system, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-107625.

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Today's living room context offers more and more possibilities when it comes to when and how to interact with the television and media content offerings. Buzzwords such as "TV Everywhere" is something that both hardware manufacturers, content providers and television networks are pursuing to great lengths. At the core of such marketing schemes is the availability of platform-independent content consumption. In a Utopian setting, the end-user should never have to worry if he or she is currently using a smart TV, tablet, phone or computer to view a video or photos, play music or play games. Taking the concept even further, the devices should also be able to connect and communicate with each other seamlessly. Having for example a television set (first screen) controlled by a mobile phone (second screen) is commonly referred to as companion device interaction and is what this thesis has investigated. More specifically, a way of discovering and launching a first screen application from a second screen application using the zero configuration discovery protocol named DIAL has been implemented into a cross-platform messaging solution. A case study was conducted to gather data about the system and its context as well as what was needed of the framework in terms of architecture design, use cases and implementation details. A proof of concept application was developed for Android that used the proposed framework, showcasing the ease of use and functionality presented in integrating DIAL into such a solution. Since DIAL is so well-documented, easy to understand and is becoming one of the industry standards among consumer electronic manufacturers in terms of device discovery, I believe it should become a standard for so called zero configuration companion device interactivity.
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Tsietsi, Mosiuoa Jeremia. "A structural and functional specification of a SCIM for service interaction management and personalisation in the IMS." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004864.

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The Internet Protocol Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a component of the 3G mobile network that has been specified by standards development organisations such as the 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project) and ETSI (European Telecommunication Standards Institute). IMS seeks to guarantee that the telecommunication network of the future provides subscribers with seamless access to services across disparate networks. In order to achieve this, it defines a service architecture that hosts application servers that provide subscribers with value added services. Typically, an application server bundles all the functionality it needs to execute the services it delivers, however this view is currently being challenged. It is now thought that services should be synthesised from simple building blocks called service capabilities. This decomposition would facilitate the re-use of service capabilities across multiple services and would support the creation of new services that could not have originally been conceived. The shift from monolithic services to those built from service capabilities poses a challenge to the current service model in IMS. To accommodate this, the 3GPP has defined an entity known as a service capability interaction manager (SCIM) that would be responsible for managing the interactions between service capabilities in order to realise complex services. Some of these interactions could potentially lead to undesirable results, which the SCIM must work to avoid. As an added requirement, it is believed that the network should allow policies to be applied to network services which the SCIM should be responsible for enforcing. At the time of writing, the functional and structural architecture of the SCIM has not yet been standardised. This thesis explores the current serv ice architecture of the IMS in detail. Proposals that address the structure and functions of the SCIM are carefully compared and contrasted. This investigation leads to the presentation of key aspects of the SCIM, and provides solutions that explain how it should interact with service capabilities, manage undesirable interactions and factor user and network operator policies into its execution model. A modified design of the IMS service layer that embeds the SCIM is subsequently presented and described. The design uses existing IMS protocols and requires no change in the behaviour of the standard IMS entities. In order to develop a testbed for experimental verification of the design, the identification of suitable software platforms was required. This thesis presents some of the most popular platforms currently used by developers such as the Open IMS Core and OpenSER, as well as an open source, Java-based, multimedia communication platform called Mobicents. As a precursor to the development of the SCIM, a converged multimedia service is presented that describes how a video streaming application that is leveraged by a web portal was implemented for an IMS testbed using Mobicents components. The Mobicents SIP Servlets container was subsequently used to model an initial prototype of the SCIM, using a mUlti-component telephony service to illustrate the proposed service execution model. The design focuses on SIP-based services only, but should also work for other types of IMS application servers as well.
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Blackler, Alethea Liane. "Intuitive interaction with complex artefacts." Queensland University of Technology, 2006. http://eprints.qut.edu.au/16219/.

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This thesis examines the role of intuition in the way that people operate unfamiliar devices, and the importance of this for designers. Intuition is a type of cognitive processing that is often non-conscious and utilises stored experiential knowledge. Intuitive interaction involves the use of knowledge gained from other products and/or experiences. Therefore, products that people use intuitively are those with features they have encountered before. This position has been supported by two initial experimental studies, which revealed that prior exposure to products employing similar features helped participants to complete set tasks more quickly and intuitively, and that familiar features were intuitively used more often than unfamiliar ones. Participants who had a higher level of familiarity with similar technologies were able to use significantly more of the features intuitively the first time they encountered them, and were significantly quicker at doing the tasks. Those who were less familiar with relevant technologies required more assistance. A third experiment was designed to test four different interface designs on a remote control in order to establish which of two variables - a feature's appearance or its location - was more important in making a design intuitive to use. As with the previous experiments, the findings of Experiment 3 suggested that performance is affected by a person's level of familiarity with similar technologies. Appearance (shape, size and labelling of buttons) seems to be the variable that most affects time spent on a task and intuitive uses. This suggests that the cues that people store in memory about a product's features depend on how the features look, rather than where on the product they are placed. Three principles of intuitive interaction have been developed. A conceptual tool has also been devised to guide designers in their planning for intuitive interaction. Designers can work with these in order to make interfaces intuitive to use, and thus help users to adapt more easily to new products and product types.
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Goulart, Ana Elisa Pereira. "Signaling Architectures for the Interaction of the Session Initiation Protocol and Quality of Service for Internet Multimedia Applications." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/6932.

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Interactive multimedia sessions combine requirements of traditional telephony services and Internet applications. This requires call setup, call signaling, negotiation, routing, security, and network resources. Seeking to facilitate the use of quality of service (QoS) mechanisms to users of such applications, this thesis presented new signaling architectures that addressed the interaction of the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) as the session control signaling protocol and current resource management frameworks. The Differentiated Services (DiffServ) architecture is used as the primary example. The new architectures addressed the roles of SIP agents and proxy servers in subjects such as resource negotiation, call authorization, and end-to-end QoS in heterogeneous networks. First, an architecture based on the use of QoS-enhanced SIP proxies and a SIP-based interface between the application and network layers was developed, implemented in a testbed, and performance enhancements demonstrated. Further studying of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) proposal for the integration of SIP and resource management led to the development of a new signaling scheme, Resource management Overlapped with Answering Delay (ROAD). It explores the SIP user agent interaction with the network in a way that takes advantage of parallel user answering delays and reservation delays. An experimental evaluation of the ROAD scheme showed its call setup delay savings and reduced signaling load. Then, on the interaction of SIP and call admission control, an inter-domain call authorization model that implements the concepts of proxies as gate controllers (QoS-enhanced SIP proxies-GC), and that provides call authorization status and adds more granularity to the authorization process is proposed. This model showed to be scalable in terms of the need to add more resources to compensate for the increasing service load on the servers. Finally, an example framework that applies the new signaling architectures to achieve end-to-end QoS in heterogeneous networks is presented.
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Svanberg, Christoffer, and Anton Westman. "Interaction Design - by the protocol : Combining user-centered design methods for finding user needs in a time-­‐constrained environment." Thesis, KTH, Skolan för datavetenskap och kommunikation (CSC), 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-169594.

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ABSTRACT Today there are lots of different health care computer systems in use. However, according to recent studies many of them lack necessary usability. Within Nordic pediatric cancer care, analogue treatment protocols on paper are currently used, as a complement to the digital medical records and prescription systems. In these protocols, doctors and nurses note information regarding the patient’s treatment. Comments and changes are noted in the margin, which sometimes leads to making the protocol messy and difficult to grasp. Since several people are involved in the handling of the treatment protocols it occasionally happens that the protocol disappears for periods of time. We had two aims with this project. The first was to examine and map requirements for a usable interactive treatment plan for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, ALL. The second was to investigate if our suggested combination of methods would be sufficient to acquire these requirements in a setting where the users, i.e. physicians, were time-­‐constrained.   Based on large variety of theories and methods from educational science and research in human computer interaction, we have conducted a qualitative study, iterating a combination of user-­‐centered design methods, with a revision of the requirements as well as the design following each iteration. The requirements analysis was performed in close collaboration with the doctors at the Astrid Lindgren Children's Hospital, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.   Our results indicate that by using a combination of methods from usability engineering and participatory design, a well-­‐defined list of requirements from the doctors could be identified which might be sufficient to develop an interactive prototype for a digital treatment protocol. In addition we found that our method enabled an exchange of knowledge between the designers and the users. In conclusion, these combined methods were suitable for enhancing the software designer’s understanding of the user needs in this time-­‐constrained environment.
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Books on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Light, Janice C. A protocol for the assessment of the communicative interaction skills of nonspeaking severely handicapped adults and their facilitators. Toronto, Ont: Augmentative Communication Service, Hugh MacMillan Medical Centre, 1986.

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Drug-DNA interaction protocols. 2nd ed. New York, N.Y: Humana Press, Springer Science+Business Media, 2010.

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Lin, Ren-Jang, ed. RNA-Protein Interaction Protocols. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-475-3.

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Fox, Keith R., ed. Drug-DNA Interaction Protocols. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-418-0.

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Raman, Jai, ed. RNA-Protein Interaction Protocols. London: Springer London, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84800-104-6.

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Haynes, Susan R. RNA-Protein Interaction Protocols. New Jersey: Humana Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1385/1592596762.

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Fox, Keith R. Drug-DNA Interaction Protocols. New Jersey: Humana Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1385/089603447x.

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Moss, Tom. DNA-protein interactions: Principles and protocols. 2nd ed. Totowa, N.J: Humana, 2011.

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Kleinschmidt, Jörg H. Lipid-protein Interactions: Methods and protocols. New York: Humana Press, 2013.

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Cell-cell interactions: Methods and protocols. 2nd ed. New York: Humana Press/Springer, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Huget, Marc-Philippe, and Jean-Luc Koning. "Interaction Protocol Engineering." In Communication in Multiagent Systems, 179–93. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-44972-0_9.

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Carrino, Francesco, Antonio Ridi, Rolf Ingold, Omar Abou Khaled, and Elena Mugellini. "Gesture vs. Gesticulation: A Test Protocol." In Human-Computer Interaction. Interaction Modalities and Techniques, 157–66. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39330-3_17.

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El Fallah-Seghrouchni, Amal, Serge Haddad, and Hamza Mazouzi. "Protocol Engineering for Multi-agent Interaction." In Multi-Agent System Engineering, 89–101. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-48437-x_8.

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Chen, Hongbing, Qun Yang, and Manwu Xu. "A Calculus for MAS Interaction Protocol." In Agent Computing and Multi-Agent Systems, 22–33. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11802372_6.

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Bauminger-Zviely, Nirit, Dganit Eytan, Sagit Hoshmand, and Ofira Rajwan Ben–Shlomo. "The PPSI Peer Social Interaction Protocol." In Preschool Peer Social Intervention in Autism Spectrum Disorder, 63–110. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79080-6_5.

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Chisnell, Dana, Karen Bachmann, Sharon Laskowski, and Svetlana Lowry. "Usability for Poll Workers: A Voting System Usability Test Protocol." In Human-Computer Interaction. Interacting in Various Application Domains, 458–67. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02583-9_50.

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Wojciechowski, Paweł T., Sergio Mena, and André Schiper. "Semantics of Protocol Modules Composition and Interaction." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 389–404. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-46000-4_35.

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Koning, Jean-Luc, Marc-Philippe Huget, Jun Wei, and Xu Wang. "Extended Modeling Languages for Interaction Protocol Design." In Agent-Oriented Software Engineering II, 68–83. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-70657-7_5.

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Carlos, Marcelo, and Geraint Price. "Understanding the Weaknesses of Human-Protocol Interaction." In Financial Cryptography and Data Security, 13–26. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-34638-5_2.

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Schroeder, Andreas, and Philip Mayer. "Verifying Interaction Protocol Compliance of Service Orchestrations." In Service-Oriented Computing – ICSOC 2007, 545–50. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-89652-4_44.

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Conference papers on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Hienert, Daniel, Dagmar Kern, Matthew Mitsui, Chirag Shah, and Nicholas J. Belkin. "Reading Protocol." In CHIIR '19: Conference on Human Information Interaction and Retrieval. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3295750.3298921.

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Chen Ling, Wu Bing, Hu Zhi-wei, and Liang Jia-hong. "Characterizing protocol interaction using metamodeling methodology." In 2010 IEEE International Conference on Wireless Communications, Networking and Information Security (WCNIS). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wcins.2010.5544126.

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Bengtsson, Hoai Hoang, Lei Chen, Alexey Voronov, and Cristofer Englund. "Interaction Protocol for Highway Platoon Merge." In 2015 IEEE 18th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems - (ITSC 2015). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/itsc.2015.319.

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"PROTOCOL MODELS OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION." In 10th International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems. SciTePress - Science and and Technology Publications, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0001701503670370.

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Yang, Yanping, Mingan Zhang, Xiqing Ye, Houwu Chen, and Xinke Lian. "Protocol Compatibility Verification for Web Services Interaction." In 2009 Fifth International Conference on Semantics, Knowledge and Grid. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/skg.2009.86.

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Motahari-Nezhad, H. R., R. Saint-Paul, B. Benatallah, and F. Casati. "Protocol Discovery from Imperfect Service Interaction Logs." In 2007 IEEE 23rd International Conference on Data Engineering. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icde.2007.369022.

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Gutierrez-Nolasco, Sebastian, Nalini Venkatasubramanian, and Carolyn Talcott. "A semantic model for safe protocol interaction." In the 2006 ACM symposium. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1141277.1141650.

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Charif-Djebbar, Y., and N. Sabouret. "An agent interaction protocol for ambient intelligence." In 2nd IET International Conference on Intelligent Environments (IE 06). IEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:20060652.

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Dospisil, Jana, and Arin Khemngoen. "Measuring the Complexity of Mobile Agents Designed with Aspect/J." In 2003 Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2615.

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Abstract:
This paper describes research in measuring the code complexity of mobile agent applications designed with aspect-oriented programming (AOP) as captured in the AspectJ™ language. The modularized code encapsulating agent interactions is characterized by class hierarchies which are shared structures. Mobile agent design suffers from frequent changes in interaction protocols which leads to chaotic development. Additional subclassing, modification to protocols, restructuring of the class hierarchies, changes to visibility of attributes and methods overloading result in increased complexity of the code and disorder. Our experonce with fine tuning of protocols shows that the probability that a subclass will not consistently extend the protocol content of its superclass is increasing with the depth of hierarchy. The tools like Hyper/Jand Aspect/J support the separation of concerns thus allowing different approach to evolving the protocol content rather than extending the class hierarchies. In this paper we present the approach to analyzing protocol design and assessing the complexity by measuring the entropy of the mobile agent application code designed with Aspect/J. The comparison of complexity measures with the same mobile agent application designed and maintained as typical Java application indicates reduction in complexity in favor of design with Aspect/J.
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Ramaswamy, Vinod, Diganto Choudhury, and Srinivas Shakkottai. "Which protocol? Mutual interaction of heterogeneous congestion controllers." In IEEE INFOCOM 2011 - IEEE Conference on Computer Communications. IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/infcom.2011.5935126.

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Reports on the topic "Interaction protocol"

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Rosenberg, J. A Framework for Application Interaction in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP). RFC Editor, October 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc5629.

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Haberman, B., and J. Martin. Internet Group Management Protocol Version 3 (IGMPv3) / Multicast Listener Discovery Version 2 (MLDv2) and Multicast Routing Protocol Interaction. RFC Editor, May 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc5186.

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Collins, A. G., and M. E. Crocker. Protocol for laboratory research on degradation, interaction, and fate of wastes disposed by deep-well injection: Final report. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/5504582.

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O'Brien, Sheila. Distributed Interactive Simulation Protocol Extensions. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada283349.

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Rosenberg, J. Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols. RFC Editor, April 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc5245.

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Crispin, M. R. Interactive Mail Access Protocol: Version 2. RFC Editor, July 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc1064.

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Crispin, M. R. Interactive Mail Access Protocol: Version 2. RFC Editor, August 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc1176.

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Rice, J. Interactive Mail Access Protocol: Version 3. RFC Editor, February 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc1203.

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Enghardt, T., T. Pauly, C. Perkins, K. Rose, and C. Wood. A Survey of the Interaction between Security Protocols and Transport Services. RFC Editor, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc8922.

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Keranen, A., C. Holmberg, and J. Rosenberg. Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal. RFC Editor, July 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc8445.

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