The computer after me awareness and self-awareness in autonomic systems

We are increasingly seeing computer systems which are expected to function without operator intervention. This is perhaps acceptable for running computer networks or traffic lights; however, we are now seeing computer systems deployed to qualitatively influence human judgments such as rulings on leg...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Pitt, Jeremy (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: London Imperial College Press [2015]
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Call Number :QA 76.167 .C66 2015
Table of Contents:
  • 1. Introduction : the computer after me
  • What Comes After the 'Disappeared Computer'?
  • 2. Towards self-aware and self-composing services
  • 3. Issues in engineering self-aware and self-expressive ensembles
  • 4. Social awareness in technical systems
  • 5. Self-healing software
  • 6. Bring it on, complexity! Present and future of self-organising middle-out abstraction
  • Is That Computer Out of Get Me?
  • 7. Self-steering and aware homes
  • 8. Assistive awareness in smart grids
  • 9. Norm-aware socio-technical systems
  • 10. Interactive design activism
  • 11. The social computer
  • 12. Collective awareness and the new institution science
  • 13. Be vigilant: there are limits to veillance
  • The Engineers of Computer Souls?
  • 14. Robotic self-modeling
  • 15. Reflective systems are a good step towards aware systems
  • 16. Robots with internal models: a route to self-aware and hence safer robots
  • 17. Awareness and responsibility in autonomous weapons systems
  • 18. Computational self-awareness and learning machines