Body Sensor Network: A Self-Adaptive System Exemplar in the Healthcare Domain
Paper i proceeding, 2021

Recent worldwide events shed light on the need of human-centered systems engineering in the healthcare domain. These systems must be prepared to evolve quickly but safely, according to unpredicted environments and ever-changing pathogens that spread ruthlessly. Such scenarios suffocate hospitals' infrastructure and disable healthcare systems that are not prepared to deal with unpredicted environments without costly re-engineering. In the face of these challenges, we offer the SA-BSN - Self-Adaptive Body Sensor Network - prototype to explore the rather dynamic patient's health status monitoring. The exemplar is focused on self-adaptation and comes with scenarios that hinder an interplay between system reliability and battery consumption that is available after each execution. Also, we provide: (i) a noise injection mechanism, (ii) file-based patient profiles' configuration, (iii) six healthcare sensor simulations, and (iv) an extensible/reusable controller implementation for self-adaptation. The artifact is implemented in ROS (Robot Operating System), which embraces principles such as ease of use and relies on an active open source community support

cyber-physical systems

healthcare exemplar

Body sensor network

control theory

self-adaptive systems

Författare

Eric Bernd Gil

Universidade de Brasilia

Ricardo Diniz Caldas

Cyber Physical Systems

Arthur Rodrigues

Universidade de Brasilia

Gabriel Levi Gomes da Silva

Universidade de Brasilia

Genaina Nunes Rodrigues

Universidade de Brasilia

Patrizio Pelliccione

Göteborgs universitet

2021 International Symposium on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems (SEAMS)

2157-2321 (ISSN)


978-1-6654-0289-7 (ISBN)

2021 International Symposium on Software Engineering for Adaptive and Self-Managing Systems (SEAMS)
Madrid, Spain,

Ämneskategorier

Datorteknik

Inbäddad systemteknik

Datavetenskap (datalogi)

DOI

10.1109/SEAMS51251.2021.00037

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2021-11-26