DocumentCode :
2342051
Title :
Towards an Understanding of Decision Complexity in IT Configuration
Author :
Lin, Bin ; Brown, Aaron B. ; Hellerstein, Joseph L.
Author_Institution :
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Northwestern University. Email: binlin@cs.northwestern.edu
fYear :
2006
fDate :
13-16 June 2006
Firstpage :
279
Lastpage :
282
Abstract :
There exist many opportunities for deploying autonomic computing in an IT environment. The highest-value opportunities are going to be where we can reduce human decision-making complexity for systems administrators. To identify these opportunities, we need a model of decision complexity for configuring and operating computing systems. This paper extends previous work on models and metrics for IT configuration complexity by adding the concept of decision complexity. As the first step towards a complete model of decision complexity, we describe an extensive user study of decision making in a carefully-mapped analogous domain (route planning) and illustrate how the results of that study suggest an initial model of decision complexity applicable to IT configuration. The model identifies the key factors affecting decision complexity and highlights several interesting results, including the fact that decision complexity has significantly different impacts on user-perceived difficulty than on objective measures like time and error rate. We also describe some of the implications of our decision complexity model for system designers seeking to automate the decision-making and reduce the configuration complexity of their systems.
Keywords :
Automation; Computers; Costs; Decision making; Environmental management; Error analysis; Gold; Humans; Time measurement;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Autonomic Computing, 2006. ICAC '06. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0175-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICAC.2006.1662409
Filename :
1662409
Link To Document :
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