The Vision of Autonomic Computing
Computer
Towards Autonomic Computing: Effective Event Management
SEW '02 Proceedings of the 27th Annual NASA Goddard Software Engineering Workshop (SEW-27'02)
A knowledge plane for the internet
Proceedings of the 2003 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Affect and machine design: Lessons for the development of autonomous machines
IBM Systems Journal
PAC-MEN: Personal Autonomic Computing Monitoring Environment
DEXA '04 Proceedings of the Database and Expert Systems Applications, 15th International Workshop
Autonomic Computing " Panacea or Poppycock?
ECBS '05 Proceedings of the 12th IEEE International Conference and Workshops on Engineering of Computer-Based Systems
AMUSE: autonomic management of ubiquitous e-Health systems
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience - Selected Papers from the 2005 U.K. e-Science All Hands Meeting (AHM 2005)
IJCAI'81 Proceedings of the 7th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 1
Introducing autonomic behaviour in semantic web agents
ISWC'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on The Semantic Web
Autonomic agents for survivable security systems
EUC'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on Embedded and Ubiquitous Computing
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Technological developments such as biometrics are providing new potential for next generation security systems. At the same time these developments can make the system more complex to manage. Some classes of systems have a fundamental requirement to survive be that to ensure an organization does not loose tens of millions of dollars due to downtime or to ensure there is not a security breach. Autonomic self-managing systems are motivated to hide the ever increasing complexity in today’s systems but through their selfware approach they also offer the potential to create survivable systems. This paper details one such approach, to create a survivable security system for correction centers.