Doctoral research
Thesis Supervisors
Prof. Dr. Sanjay Chaudhary, DA-IICT, India
Dr. Anutosh Maitra,
SETLabs, Infosys, India.
Thesis Committee
Prof. Dr. Esteban Zimanyi, Université Libre de Bruxelles
(ULB), Belgium
Dr.
Amit Anil Nanavati, IBM India Research Lab, India
Thesis Title
Dynamic Information Management Methodology with Situation Awareness Capability
Abstract
In present world, information generation, handling and
utilization is deeply integrated with various activities. From
entertainment to serious professional activities, information
content is managed in some ways. Appropriate information content
is beneficial and sometimes becomes critical to life, business
or the environment that supports them. Handling of information
is therefore increasingly perceived as integral part of the
activities. Systematic approach for handling information by
individuals and organization is known as “information
management".
A common approach towards information management is limited to
recording and retrieval of data pertinent to various human
activities or environmental processes. The resulting system acts
as a computerized log of human activity transactions or
phenomena recorded in natural environment. Systems supporting
information management are defined based on project specific
requirements with limited scope. The project-oriented or
mission-specific engineering approaches employed in designing
such systems also restrict the scope of supported information
management activities.
It is important to realize that projects or missions are
identified only as short-term objective that contribute to the
long-term goals and vision of entities. A system defined to
serve short-term goals may soon become incapable of meeting the
emergent needs. Even with accurate estimation of potential
change, external intervention cannot be avoided due to
dependence of knowledge, authority and resource capability
required to realize the goals. The dynamism exhibited by
relevant entities, results in continuous change of needs
resulting in constantly changing requirements.
With increasing amount of complex interdependence and dynamic
behavior of relevant entities, the task of information
management has become difficult. From the scale of effort
required to address the complex interdependence, it is realized
that information management cannot be carried out with systems
created and managed by individuals and organizations in
isolation. Also, from the dynamic behavior and evolution
exhibited by relevant entities, it is realized that underlying
systems must also undergo change at similar rates. In summary, a
paradigm shift is required in information management strategy
and information should be made available as critical
infrastructure service.
This thesis argues that information management should be based
on the goals of the involved individuals instead of the
conventional activity-oriented approaches. The required approach
not only should support the goal-specific information, but also
allow identification of newer goals with emerging trends in the
system. Information need of individuals and organizations is
uniquely identified in the form of situations. The state of
having access to relevant information is defined as situation
awareness capability. The situation awareness approach proposed
for information management strategy identifies role of
individuals in producing and consuming information. It is based
on the realization that, no one can have the global picture of
the situation, but can play a role in building the rich picture
of situation by contributing the part of the situation known.
The resulting coordinated effort allows realization of situation
awareness capability to the contributors.
In order to support the argument, the situation theory and
semantics is accepted as base. It is stated that small
coordinated assertions regarding situations can be integrated to
prepare a rich representation of the world. Qualitative and
quantitative estimate of information needs are identified based
on the commitment towards goals. Three problems are identified
in identification of information needs of individuals and
organizations. The implied goal-matching problem relates to the
challenge of identification and handling of goals that are not
explicitly expressed. The transient system element problem
indicates the challenges of numerous short-lived entities that
are relevant to the information needs. The third problem is
regarding identification of the event space - a set of all
possible events that are possible in given scenario.
As a solution to this problem, a conceptual modeling strategy
followed by information processing strategy is proposed. The
proposal utilizes the rich representation created with
conceptual modeling process in meeting the information needs. It
is established that scale and scope of work involved in
conceptual modeling and information processing requires
large-scale collaboration from various stakeholders. For
consistency of collaborative effort, appropriate method content
is provided. Reuse and traceability of work products are
encouraged with unique situation awareness artifacts furnishing
information about task and availability of reusable outcomes and
other related information. The proposed information management
facility is prescribed as a critical infrastructure service
required in achieving the large-scale collaboration. Appropriate
system architecture is introduced to facilitate realization of
required domain specific middleware services.
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