Title :
Agent-based integration of rescue systems for first responders
Author :
Balogh, Z. ; Gatial, E. ; Habala, O. ; Hluchý, L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Parallel & Distrib. Comput., Inst. of Inf., Bratislava, Slovakia
Abstract :
Routine operations of emergency first responders are usually well managed. The situation is different for mass casualty emergencies where more people and properties are threatened. In such situations there are no predefined plans in place and mitigation is solved mostly through crisis management. Teams managing such acute accidents are often working in information insufficiency. Timely information exchange between involved agencies, common understanding of data and fast provision of knowledge can save lives and protect properties. Useful information is heterogeneous and is distributed across many organizations in disparate information sources in many formats with different access policies and in varying quality. The information sources range from sensors deployed on incidence sites, publicly available data sources, corporate legacy systems, documents stored on remote locations to human end-users providing information using mobile devices. This article addresses operational challenges of First Responders and complementary challenges in accessing and analyzing information from multiple sources to provide advanced capabilities for command and control in emergency response. Herein we propose to use an agent-based infrastructure for supporting such interoperability. We propose to build the framework amplifying an agent infrastructure developed in scope of the SECRICOM EU integrated project. In this article we focus mainly on the conceptual architecture of such integration framework.
Keywords :
command and control systems; emergency services; mobile computing; multi-agent systems; open systems; sensors; team working; SECRICOM EU integrated project; access policies; agent-based infrastructure; agent-based integration; command and control; corporate legacy systems; crisis management; document storage; emergency first responders; human end-users; incidence sites; information exchange; information insufficiency; information sources; interoperability; knowledge provision; mass casualty emergencies; mobile devices; publicly available data sources; rescue systems; routine operations; team management; Accidents; Crisis management; Emergency services; Fires; Informatics; Mobile agents; Sensors;
Conference_Titel :
Applied Machine Intelligence and Informatics (SAMI), 2012 IEEE 10th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Herl´any
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0196-2
DOI :
10.1109/SAMI.2012.6208961