Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systems

Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systems (DDDAS) is a new paradigm whereby the computation and instrumentation aspects of an application system are dynamically integrated in a feed-back control loop, in the sense that instrumentation data can be dynamically incorporated in to the executing model of the application, and in reverse the executing model can control the instrumentation. Such approaches have been shown that can enable more accurate and faster modeling and analysis of the characteristics and behaviors of a system and can exploit data in intelligent ways to convert them to new capabilities, including decision support systems with the accuracy of full scale modeling, efficient data collection, management, and data mining. The DDDAS concept - and the term - was proposed by Frederica Darema for the National Science Foundation (NSF) workshop in March 2000.

There are several affiliated annual meetings and conferences, including:

References

  1. F. Darema, “Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systems: A New Paradigm for Application Simulations and Measurements. Computational Science.” Int’l Conf. on Computational Science (ICCS), LNCS, 3038, 662–669, 2004.
  2. F. Darema, “Grid Computing and Beyond: The Context of Dynamic Data Driven Applications Systems,” Proceedings IEEE, 93(3), p. 692-697, 2005.
  3. G. Allen, “Building a Dynamic Data Driven Application System for Hurricane Forecasting,” Int’l Conf. on Computational Science (ICCS), LNCS, vol. 4487, p. 1034–1041. Springer, Heidelberg, 2007.
  4. M. Denham, A. Cortes, T. Margalef, E. Luque, “Applying a Dynamic Data Driven Genetic Algorithm to Improve Forest Fire Spread Prediction,” M. Bubak et al. (Eds.): ICCS 2008, LNCS 5103, pp. 36–45, 2008.
  5. E. Blasch, Y. Al-Nashif, and S. Hariri, “Static versus Dynamic Data Information Fusion analysis using DDDAS for Cyber Trust,” Procedia Computer Science, Vol. 29, pp. 1299-1313, 2014.
  6. X. Shi, H. Damgacioglu, N. Celik, “A Dynamic Data Driven Approach for Operation Planning of Microgrids,” Procedia Computer Science, 2015.

    External links

    See also

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/14/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.