Context-aware pervasive systems

Context-aware computing refers to a general class of mobile systems that can sense their physical environment, and adapt their behavior accordingly.[1]

Three important aspects of context are: where you are; who you are with; and what resources are nearby.[2] Although ___location is a primary capability, ___location-aware does not necessarily capture things of interest that are mobile or changing. Context-aware in contrast is used more generally to include nearby people, devices, lighting, noise level, network availability, and even the social situation, e.g., whether you are with your family or a friend from school.[citation needed]

History

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The concept emerged from ubiquitous computing research at Xerox PARC and elsewhere in the early 1990s.[citation needed] The term 'context-aware' was first used by Schilit and Theimer in their 1994 paper Disseminating Active Map Information to Mobile Hosts where they describe a model of computing in which users interact with many different mobile and stationary computers and classify a context-aware systems as one that can adapt according to its ___location of use, the collection of nearby people and objects, as well as the changes to those objects over time over the course of the day.[3][4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ GS, Thyagaraju; Umakant P Kulkarni (2012). "Design and Implementation of User Context aware Recommendation Engine for Mobile using Bayesian Network, Fuzzy Logic and Rule Base". International Journal of Computer Applications. 40 (3): 47–63. Bibcode:2012IJCA...40c..47G. doi:10.5120/5028-7176.
  2. ^ Want, Roy; Adams, Norman; Schilit, Bill N. (1995). "Context-Aware Computing Applications". 1994 First Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications. pp. 85–90. doi:10.1109/WMCSA.1994.16. ISBN 978-0-7695-3451-0. S2CID 2673708.
  3. ^ Schilit, B.N.; Theimer, M.M. (1994). "Disseminating Active Map Information to Mobile Hosts". IEEE Network. 8 (5): 22–32. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.49.1499. doi:10.1109/65.313011. S2CID 766998.
  4. ^ "DELIVERABLE D2.2– Document on Ubiquitous Communication" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 28, 2022.

Further reading

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