Add abstract
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search abstract
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
by Shailaja Venkatsubramanyan
| Institution: | University of Arizona |
|---|---|
| Department: | |
| Degree: | |
| Year: | 1999 |
| Keywords: | Business Administration, Management. |
| Posted: | |
| Record ID: | 1704677 |
| Full text PDF: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/284913 |
The Internet has made it possible for large amounts of data to be made available to users in a variety of areas. This has to lead to users being inundated with lots of information, making it difficult for them to locate data that would be of use to them. One domain that has not been immune to this problem is that of remote sensing. Remotely sensed data is available in abundance and can potentially be of use to many users. But it is difficult for users from different application domains to locate appropriate datasets and process them. Current search tools such as search engines are not adequate for remotely sensed data as most searches using these tools yield an inordinately large number of web sites, each of which has to be explored individually by the user and then the results manually collated. Besides, traditional search techniques are not embedded with the knowledge about the remote sensing domain. The goal of this research is to find out how users with varying backgrounds and levels of expertise can retrieve and access resources over the Internet. This dissertation describes a virtual enterprise model of intelligent agents that deals with the complexities of locating and retrieving remotely sensed data over the Internet. The methodology followed in this research includes (i) agent modeling, (ii) building agent cooperation techniques that would enable agents to understand terminology used at different sites and communicate with each other, (iii) optimizing communication flows between various agents, (iv) validating the model, and (v) verifying the prototype. The important contributions of this research include among others an agent model generalizable to problem domains other than remote sensing, a formally defined ontology (a collection of terms and relationships between those terms) for the remote sensing domain, and a prototype system that implements the model and the ontology.
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
|
|
Prediction of Upper Body Power of Cross-Country Sk...
|
|
|
Bitcoins
Mining, Transaction, Security Challenges and Futur...
|
|
|
Applying User-Centered Interface Design Methods to...
|
|
|
Head-Order Techniques and Other Pragmatics of Lamb...
|
|
|
Visualization of Interface Metaphor for Software
An Engineering Approach
|
|
|
Indoor Wireless Metering Networks
A Collection of Algorithms Enabling Low Power/Low ...
|
|
|
Automated Generation of Geometrically-Precise and ...
|
|
|
A Study on the Tone-Reservation Technique for Peak...
|