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| | Buchholz, T., Küpper, A., Schiffers, M. (2003):
Quality of Context Information: What it is and why we need it
When people interact with each other, they implicitly make use of context information
while intuitively deducing and interpreting their actual situation. Compared
to humans, IT infrastructures cannot easily take advantage of context information
in interactions. Typically, context information has to be provided explicitly.
Recently, cellular network operators have been showing interest in offering
Context-Aware Services (CAS) in the future. For a service to be context-aware
it must be able to use context information in order to adapt its behavior or the
content it provides. Examples of CASs are restaurant finders, tour guides and
dating services. These services will depend on the availability of context information
which must be provided at the right time, in the right quality, and at the
right place. The quality of this context information is neither identical to Quality
of Service (QoS), nor to the quality of the underlying hardware components, i.e.,
Quality of Device (QoD). Rather, the precision, probability of correctness, trustworthiness,
resolution, and up-to-dateness of context information form a new set
of quality parameters which we call Quality of Context (QoC).
In this paper, we will discuss what QoC is, what its most important parameters
are and how QoC relates to QoS and QoD. These three notions of quality are
unequal, but not unrelated. Based on several examples we will show the interdependence
between them. We will argue that QoC as a new notion of quality is
necessary to allow for the provisioning of CASs in an interorganizational manner.
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