Situational Factor Determinants of the Allocation of Decision Rights to Edge Computers

IF 2.5 Q2 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS
C. Chua, F. Niederman
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Abstract

Internet of Things (IoT) designers frequently must determine whether action-oriented decisions should be made by edge computers or whether they should be made only by central servers combining input from all edge computers. An important example of this design problem occurs in fire protection IoT, where individual edge computers attached to sensors might be empowered to make decisions (have decision rights) about how to manage the fire. Alternatively, decision rights could be held exclusively by a central server isolated from the fire, because the designer is concerned damage to edge computers could cause them to act unreliably. This research models this allocation of decision rights to identify the relative influence of various decision factors. We first model the allocation of decision rights under the following assumptions: (1) The central server cannot make an error the edge computer cannot make; (2) the central server cannot update the edge computer with its information in a timely manner; and (3) the central server cannot reverse an action initiated by the edge computer to explore the factors impacting decision rights conferral. We then relax each of these three assumptions. We show how relaxing each assumption radically changes the factors impacting decision rights conferral. We also show that allowing the central server to update information on the edge computer or reverse the edge computer's decision making can result in overall lower system performance. We then perform a series of numerical experiments to understand how changing various parameters affect the problem. We show for the general real-world scenario, the key factor influencing the decision is the ability of the edge computer to detect false alarms. We also show magnitude of loss and ratio of real to false incidents have a linear and logarithmic relationship to the reliability of the edge computer.
边缘计算机决策权分配的情境因素决定因素
物联网(IoT)设计师经常必须确定是由边缘计算机做出面向行动的决策,还是仅由中央服务器结合所有边缘计算机的输入做出决策。这种设计问题的一个重要例子发生在消防物联网中,连接到传感器的单个边缘计算机可能有权就如何管理火灾做出决定(拥有决策权)。或者,决策权可以由与火灾隔离的中央服务器独家拥有,因为设计者担心边缘计算机的损坏可能会导致它们的行为不可靠。本研究对这种决策权的分配进行建模,以确定各种决策因素的相对影响。我们首先在以下假设下对决策权的分配进行建模:(1)中央服务器不能犯边缘计算机不能犯的错误;(2) 中央服务器不能及时地用其信息更新边缘计算机;以及(3)中央服务器不能逆转边缘计算机发起的探索影响决策权授予的因素的动作。然后我们放松这三个假设中的每一个。我们展示了放松每一个假设如何从根本上改变影响决策权授予的因素。我们还表明,允许中央服务器更新边缘计算机上的信息或逆转边缘计算机的决策可能会导致整体系统性能降低。然后,我们进行了一系列数值实验,以了解改变各种参数如何影响问题。我们表明,对于一般的真实世界场景,影响决策的关键因素是边缘计算机检测假警报的能力。我们还表明,损失的大小和真实与虚假事件的比率与边缘计算机的可靠性具有线性和对数关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems
ACM Transactions on Management Information Systems COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
20.00%
发文量
60
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