2004
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-30112-7_28
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Representing Context for an Adaptative Awareness Mechanism

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Cited by 31 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Around it, several elements can be considered. Reichle et al [17] call these observed elements "scope", while Kirsch-Pinheiro et al [9] call these "context elements". In both cases, it corresponds to what we really observe from the subject: its location (for a user), the available memory (for a device), etc.…”
Section: Context Meta-modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Around it, several elements can be considered. Reichle et al [17] call these observed elements "scope", while Kirsch-Pinheiro et al [9] call these "context elements". In both cases, it corresponds to what we really observe from the subject: its location (for a user), the available memory (for a device), etc.…”
Section: Context Meta-modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These representations do not consider the user in his collaborative environment. Yet, other authors ( [14], [15], [13]) have pointed out the importance of organizational information on the context definition. Similar to Najar et al, [13], we also consider that context representation should evolve to include not only physical aspects but also organizational ones.…”
Section: Context Ontologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kirsch-Pinheiro et al designed an object-oriented context model [5] which takes into account two contextual aspects [6]: physical aspect (location, device, application) and organizational aspect (group, role, calendar, activity, objects and processes shared). The context filtering process is based on general profiles that describe the users' current context and preferences.…”
Section: Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our opinion, time is important to manage the change of context but also to define the validity of a context. Kirsch-Pinheiro et al [6] limit the context model to two aspects: physical (location, device and application) and organizational (group, role, calendar, activity, objects and processes shared). This modeling does not take into account the context temporality nor the context environment as context dimensions that affect human communication.…”
Section: ) a Location Viewmentioning
confidence: 99%