The DoD high level architecture: an update
Proceedings of the 30th conference on Winter simulation
Parallel and Distribution Simulation Systems
Parallel and Distribution Simulation Systems
Bridging the HLA: Problems and Solutions
DS-RT '02 Proceedings of the Sixth IEEE International Workshop on Distributed Simulation and Real-Time Applications
IDSim: An Extensible Framework for Interoperable Distributed Simulation
ICWS '04 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
GROUP '05 Proceedings of the 2005 international ACM SIGGROUP conference on Supporting group work
HICSS '06 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 03
Aurora: An Approach to High Throughput Parallel Simulation
Proceedings of the 20th Workshop on Principles of Advanced and Distributed Simulation
WSC '04 Proceedings of the 36th conference on Winter simulation
Reversible Parallel Discrete-Event Execution of Large-Scale Epidemic Outbreak Models
PADS '10 Proceedings of the 2010 IEEE Workshop on Principles of Advanced and Distributed Simulation
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A joint project between the California and New Mexico branches of Sandia National Laboratories has demonstrated the formation of joint real-time federations of both distributed simulations and distributed simulation users under a common scenario. Two software integration frameworks were used to achieve the real-time federations. The IDSim framework, developed by Georgia Tech University and Sandia National Laboratories, was used to create the real-time federation of distributed simulations, in this case the BioDAC WMD simulation and the N-ABLE^TM agent-based microeconomic simulation (more properly, because of the impact of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, an N-ABLE^TM emulator). The GroupMeld^TM multimedia synchronous collaboration framework, developed by Sandia, was used to create the real-time federation of simulation users and simulation analysis communities. The common scenario was the release of smallpox over San Diego, California, and the operating hypothesis was that the economy itself dampens the spread of a pathogen. In addition, a small pilot experiment using the joint federations allowed a greater range of crisis management options to be performed and evaluated than would have been possible without the use of the integration frameworks.