A Modeling Framework for Evaluating Effectiveness of Smart-Infrastructure Crises Management Systems

Crises management for smart-infrastructure - infused with sensors, actuators, and intelligent agent technologies for monitoring, access control, and crisis response - requires objective and quantitative evaluation to learn for future. The concept of criticality - characterizing the effect of crises on the inhabitants of smart-infrastructure - is used in this regard. This paper establishes a criticality response modeling (CRM) framework to perform quantitative evaluation of criticality response. The framework can further be incorporated in any criticality-aware middleware for smart-infrastructure. An established stochastic model for criticality response is used from our previous work. The effectiveness of criticality response is measured in terms of the Manageability metric, characterized by the Q-value or qualifiedness of the response actions. The CRM is applied to fire emergencies in an envisioned smart oil & gas production platforms (OGPP). A simulation based evaluation, using CRM over OGPP, show that high manageability is achieved with - i) fast criticality detection, ii) fast response actuation, and iii) non-obliviousness to any subsequent criticality during response actuation - verifying the applicability of Q-value as the manageability metric.

[1]  Sandeep K. S. Gupta,et al.  Reconfigurable Context-Sensitive Middleware for Pervasive Computing , 2002, IEEE Pervasive Comput..

[2]  Rami G. Melhem,et al.  Secure-CITI Critical Information-Technology Infrastructure , 2006, DG.O.

[3]  Sandeep K. S. Gupta,et al.  Criticality aware access control model for pervasive applications , 2006, Fourth Annual IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PERCOM'06).

[4]  Frank Adelstein,et al.  Fundamentals of Mobile and Pervasive Computing , 2004 .

[5]  K. Mani Chandy Sense and Respond Systems , 2005, Encyclopedia of Database Systems.

[6]  Nalini Venkatasubramanian,et al.  Project rescue: challenges in responding to the unexpected , 2003, IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging.

[7]  John C. Knight,et al.  Safety critical systems: challenges and directions , 2002, Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Software Engineering. ICSE 2002.

[8]  Faisal Khan,et al.  Determination of human error probabilities for offshore platform musters , 2005 .

[9]  Peter Neumann,et al.  Safeware: System Safety and Computers , 1995, SOEN.

[10]  Sandeep K. S. Gupta,et al.  Performance modeling of critical event management for ubiquitous computing applications , 2006, MSWiM '06.