Abstract

This issue
This issue of JAISE is composed of six papers. The review process for the papers in this issue was supervised by our editors Anthony Fleury, Stefano Chessa, George Roussos, Anthony Fleury, Shin’ichi Konomi, Gordon Hunter, Raul Herrera, and Tiina Kymäläinen, whom we thank for their service. The back pages of this issue also include a PhD report.
The smart home concept has been around for close to three decades. Despite this history, a meaningful commercial market has not taken off in face of many optimistic forecasts over these years. One of the main reasons for this seems to be that the smart home instances still have not properly matched the needs and preferences of people in their real life. The paper
Artificial life models allow us to explore real natural phenomena during their emergence and evolution within hours of runtime. Artificial individuals are defined to behave according to their needs and the situation in the vicinity. Observation of these intelligent agents over time and their evolution through natural selection provides additional input for decision making processes. The paper
Smart environments (SmE) are often designed as embodiments which support Ambient Intelligence applications. In order to serve as a useful technology operating in the background, these environments must operate in real-time and support automatic self-configuration and self-adaptation. In SmE architectures, both physical devices and humans may provide low-level services based on their capabilities. These services are composed and connected in order to create high-level services. The composition in traditional settings requires human intervention, so changes in services are not automatic. The paper
While a wide variety of technologies enable the implementation of today’s smart environments, little work has been done on how to guide an effective and efficient adoption and utilization of these technologies to achieve specific objectives such as productivity and safety. The paper
Challenges in ubiquitous computing, including the limitation of being multi-domain, absence of a uniform name-space, challenges in user mobility, limited resources, lack of scalability, and other issues faced by these systems have led researchers to develop hybrid ubiquitous architectures which are generally cloud-based. The paper
Crime prediction has become a relevant area of research given the demands and complexities of today’s metropolitan areas. Research in crime prediction is often supported by criminology theories such as the routine activity theory, rational choice theory, and crime pattern theory. The paper
Upcoming issues
The following is the list of upcoming issues of JAISE:
May 2018: Thematic Issue based on papers from “Intelligent Environments 2017”
July 2018: Regular Issue
September 2018: Thematic Issue on “IoT for personal or mobile health”
November 2018: Regular Issue
January 2019: JAISE 10th Anniversary Issue
More information on the call for papers for future thematic issues is available on the webpage of JAISE at: http://www.iospress.nl/journal/journal-of-ambient-intelligence-and-smart-environments/.
