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Bayreuther Arbeitspapiere zur Wirtschaftsinformatik

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Author

  • Torsten Eymann (21)
  • Werner Streitberger (14)
  • Björn Schnizler (10)
  • Felix Freitag (9)
  • Isaac Chao (9)
  • Pablo Chacin (9)
  • Daniel Veit (7)
  • Michael Reinicke (7)
  • Dirk Neumann (5)
  • Leandro Navarro (5)

Year of publication

  • 2005 (8)
  • 2007 (6)
  • 2006 (5)
  • 2009 (4)
  • 2008 (3)
  • 2011 (2)
  • 2010 (1)
  • 2012 (1)

Document Type

  • Report (16)
  • Working Paper (6)
  • Conference Proceeding (3)
  • Master's Thesis (3)
  • Bachelor Thesis (1)
  • Doctoral Thesis (1)

Language

  • English (30) (remove)

Keywords

  • Grid Computing (21)
  • Agent <Informatik> (3)
  • Agent <Künstliche Intelligenz> (2)
  • Autonomer Agent (2)
  • Electronic Commerce (2)
  • Vertrauen (2)
  • Anreize (1)
  • BELOUGA (1)
  • Benchmarking (1)
  • Cloud Computing (1)

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7
Show/Hide Abstract Theoretical and Computational Basis for Economical Ressource Allocation in Application Layer Networks -Annual Report Year 1 (2005)
Torsten Eymann Michael Reinicke Werner Streitberger Björn Schnizler Daniel Veit Felix Freitag Isaac Chao Pablo Chacin Dirk Neumann
This paper identifies and defines suitable market mechanisms for Application Layer Networks (ALNs). On basis of the structured Market Engineering process, the work comprises the identification of requirements which adequate market mechanisms for ALNs have to fulfill. Subsequently, two mechanisms for each, the centralized and the decentralized case are described in this document.5
9
Show/Hide Abstract Theoretical and Computational Basis for CATNETS - Annual Report Year 2 (2006)
Torsten Eymann Werner Streitberger Daniel Veit Georg Buss Björn Schnizler Dirk Neumann
In this work the self-organising potential of the CATNETS allocation mechanism is described to provide a more comprehensive view on the research done in this project. The formal description of either the centralised and decentralised approach is presented. Furthermore the agents’ bidding model is described and a comprehensive overview on how the catallactic mechanism is incorporated into the middleware and simulator environments is given.
23
Show/Hide Abstract Theoretical and Computation Basis for CATNETS - Annual Report Year 3 (2007)
Daniel Veit Georg Buss Björn Schnizler Dirk Neumann Werner Streitberger Torsten Eymann
In this document the developments in defining the computational and theoretical framework for economical resource allocation are described. Accordingly the formal specification of the market mechanisms, bidding strategies of the involved agents and the integration of the market mechanisms into the simulator were refined.
53
Show/Hide Abstract The service-productivity learning cockpit – a business intelligence tool for service enterprises (2012)
Sebastian Walther Gaurang Phadke Torsten Eymann
The paper describes the development of an agent-based simulation tool for hospital managers to manage their productivity of services, especially in the context of supporting services like patient transport logistics. The learning cockpit allows hospital managers to see how the change of inputs changes the overall perceived customer values of all stakeholders and therefore to get a visualization of the impacts their decisions cause. The paper introduces the general research domain service-productivity, followed by a description of the development steps of artefact creation. The learning cockpit is part of a research project called BELOUGA, which is funded by the German government.
52
Show/Hide Abstract The BabelNEG System - A Protocol-generic Infrastructure for Electronic SLA Negotiations in the Internet of Services (2011)
Sebastian Hudert
Visions of the next-generation Internet of Services are driven by digital resources traded on a global scope. For the resulting economic setting, automated on-line techniques for handling services and resources themselves, for advertising and discovering as well as for the on-the-fly negotiation of proper terms for their use are needed. Hence, a flexible infrastructure for the respective management of services and associated service level agreements is mandatory. This thesis presents the results of my dissertation project. They comprise a service infrastructure, able to support the structured discovery and protocol-generic negotiation of electronic service level agreements (SLAs) and thus services themselves.
51
Show/Hide Abstract Tagungsband zum Doctoral Consortium der WI 2011 (2011)
Torsten Eymann
Since the early 1990es, young researchers participate in the doctoral consortium series, co-located with the "Wirtschaftsinformatik" conference. This volume contains the selected papers of 20 PhD candidates of the 2011 doctoral consortium in Zurich.
26
Show/Hide Abstract Simulator Development - Annual Report Year 3 (2007)
Werner Streitberger Torsten Eymann Floriano Zini Björn Schnizler Hong Tuan Kiet Vo
This document describes the progress of the simulator development with in the third year of the CATNETS project. The refinement of the simulator as well as a detailed guide to conducting simulations is presented.
10
Show/Hide Abstract Simulator Development - Annual Report Year 2 (2006)
Gaetano Calabrese Björn Schnizler Werner Streitberger Torsten Eymann Floriano Zini
In this paper the simulation environment for the CATNETS project is defined further. The chosen simulator is adopted in terms of new features an architecture changes in order to provide a valid simulation environment for Application Layer Network scenarios. Furthermore the requirements for a scenario generator and the needed configuration mechanisms for the actual simulation runs are introduced.
48
Show/Hide Abstract Reputation in Multi Agent Systems and the Incentives to Provide Feedback (2009)
Miriam Heitz Stefan König
The emergence of the Internet leads to a vast increase in the number of interactions between parties that are completely alien to each other. In general, such transactions are likely to be subject to fraud and cheating. If such systems use computerized rational agents to negotiate and execute transactions, mechanisms that lead to favorable outcomes for all parties instead of giving rise to defective behavior are necessary to make the system work: trust and reputation mechanisms. This paper examines different incentive mechanisms helping these trust and reputation mechanisms in eliciting users to report own experiences honestly.
27
Show/Hide Abstract Proof-of-Concept Application - Annual Report Year 3 (2007)
Oscar Ardaiz Pablo Chacin Isaac Chao Felix Freitag Leandro Navarro Liviu Joita Omer F. Rana Werner Streitberger Sebastian Hudert Torsten Eymann
In this report the progress of developing the proof-of-concept application in the CATNETS project is presented. Hence the development of the necessary performance measuring components as well as a distributed application to execute on economic-enhanced Grid/P2P platforms and middleware integration are described.

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