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The human communication space: towards I-centric communications

A variety of concepts for service integration and corresponding systems have been developed. On one hand, they aim for the interworking and integration of classical telecommunications and data communications services. On the other, they are focusing on universal service access from a variety of end-...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Arbanowski, S, van der Meer, S, Steglich, S, Popescu-Zeletin, R
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s007790170026
http://cds.cern.ch/record/851177
Descripción
Sumario:A variety of concepts for service integration and corresponding systems have been developed. On one hand, they aim for the interworking and integration of classical telecommunications and data communications services. On the other, they are focusing on universal service access from a variety of end-user systems. Many of the technical problems, resulting from service integration and service personalisation, have been solved. However, all these systems are driven by the concept of providing several technologies to users by keeping the peculiarity of each service. Looking at human communication behaviour and communication space, it is obvious that human beings interact habitually in a set of contexts with their environment. The individual information preferences and needs, persons to interact with, and the set of devices controlled by each individual define their personal communication space. Following this view, a new approach is to build communication systems not on the basis of specific technologies, but on the analysis of the individual communication spaces. The result is a communication system adapted to the demands of each individual (I-centric). The communication system will act an behalf of users' demands, reflecting recent actions to enable profiling and self-adaptation to contexts and situations. We introduce I-centric communications, an approach to design communication systems that adapt themselves to the individual communication space and individual environment and situation. (5 refs) .