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Dive into the research topics where Dimitrios Katsaros is active.

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Featured researches published by Dimitrios Katsaros.


Scientometrics | 2007

Generalized Hirsch h-index for disclosing latent facts in citation networks

Antonis Sidiropoulos; Dimitrios Katsaros; Yannis Manolopoulos

What is the value of a scientist and its impact upon the scientific thinking? How can we measure the prestige of a journal or a conference? The evaluation of the scientific work of a scientist and the estimation of the quality of a journal or conference has long attracted significant interest, due to the benefits by obtaining an unbiased and fair criterion. Although it appears to be simple, defining a quality metric is not an easy task. To overcome the disadvantages of the present metrics used for ranking scientists and journals, J. E. Hirsch proposed a pioneering metric, the now famous h-index. In this article we demonstrate several inefficiencies of this index and develop a pair of generalizations and effective variants of it to deal with scientist ranking and publication forum ranking. The new citation indices are able to disclose trendsetters in scientific research, as well as researchers that constantly shape their field with their influential work, no matter how old they are. We exhibit the effectiveness and the benefits of the new indices to unfold the full potential of the h-index, with extensive experimental results obtained from the DBLP, a widely known on-line digital library.


data and knowledge engineering | 2005

A data mining approach for location prediction in mobile environments

Gökhan Yavas; Dimitrios Katsaros; Özgür Ulusoy; Yannis Manolopoulos

Mobility prediction is one of the most essential issues that need to be explored for mobility management in mobile computing systems. In this paper, we propose a new algorithm for predicting the next intercell movement of a mobile user in a Personal Communication Systems network. In the first phase of our three-phase algorithm, user mobility patterns are mined from the history of mobile user trajectories. In the second phase, mobility rules are extracted from these patterns, and in the last phase, mobility predictions are accomplished by using these rules. The performance of the proposed algorithm is evaluated through simulation as compared to two other prediction methods. The performance results obtained in terms of Precision and Recall indicate that our method can make more accurate predictions than the other methods.


grid computing | 2011

Architectural Requirements for Cloud Computing Systems: An Enterprise Cloud Approach

Bhaskar Prasad Rimal; Admela Jukan; Dimitrios Katsaros; Yves Goeleven

Cloud Computing is a model of service delivery and access where dynamically scalable and virtualized resources are provided as a service over the Internet. This model creates a new horizon of opportunity for enterprises. It introduces new operating and business models that allow customers to pay for the resources they effectively use, instead of making heavy upfront investments. The biggest challenge in Cloud Computing is the lack of a de facto standard or single architectural method, which can meet the requirements of an enterprise cloud approach. In this paper, we explore the architectural features of Cloud Computing and classify them according to the requirements of end-users, enterprises that use the cloud as a platform, and cloud providers themselves. We show that several architectural features will play a major role in the adoption of the Cloud Computing paradigm as a mainstream commodity in the enterprise world. This paper also provides key guidelines to software architects and Cloud Computing application developers for creating future architectures.


IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering | 2003

A data mining algorithm for generalized Web prefetching

Alexandros Nanopoulos; Dimitrios Katsaros; Yannis Manolopoulos

Predictive Web prefetching refers to the mechanism of deducing the forthcoming page accesses of a client based on its past accesses. In this paper, we present a new context for the interpretation of Web prefetching algorithms as Markov predictors. We identify the factors that affect the performance of Web prefetching algorithms. We propose a new algorithm called WM,,, which is based on data mining and is proven to be a generalization of existing ones. It was designed to address their specific limitations and its characteristics include all the above factors. It compares favorably with previously proposed algorithms. Further, the algorithm efficiently addresses the increased number of candidates. We present a detailed performance evaluation of WM, with synthetic and real data. The experimental results show that WM/sub o/ can provide significant improvements over previously proposed Web prefetching algorithms.


Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing | 2010

Energy-efficient distributed clustering in wireless sensor networks

Nikos Dimokas; Dimitrios Katsaros; Yannis Manolopoulos

The deployment of wireless sensor networks in many application areas requires self-organization of the network nodes into clusters. Clustering is a network management technique, since it creates a hierarchical structure over a flat network. Quite a lot of node clustering techniques have appeared in the literature, and roughly fall into two families: those based on the construction of a dominating set and those which are based solely on energy considerations. The former family suffers from the fact that only a small subset of the network nodes are responsible for relaying the messages, and thus cause rapid consumption of the energy of these nodes. The latter family uses the residual energy of each node in order to decide about whether it will elect itself as a leader of a cluster or not. This familys methods ignore topological features of the nodes and are used in combination with the methods of the former family. We propose an energy-efficient distributed clustering protocol for wireless sensor networks, based on a metric for characterizing the significance of a node, w.r.t. its contribution in relaying messages. The protocol achieves small communication complexity and linear computation complexity. Experimental results attest that the protocol improves network longevity.


IEEE Network | 2010

Social network analysis concepts in the design of wireless Ad Hoc network protocols

Dimitrios Katsaros; Nikos Dimokas; Leandros Tassiulas

This article presents a survey of ad hoc networking protocols that have used concepts such as centrality metrics and community formation from the area of social network analysis, which is seen as a network measurement task that deals with structural properties of the network graph. We recognize the synergy among social network analysis and ad hoc networking as a fertile research area that can provide significant advances for the design of network protocols, especially in environments where the communication is opportunistic in nature and therefore cannot be easily or efficiently described as an optimization problem, and other systematic approaches like cross-layer optimization are more difficult to apply.


international conference on mobile multimedia communications | 2007

Cooperative caching in wireless multimedia sensor networks

Nikos Dimokas; Dimitrios Katsaros; Yannis Manolopoulos

The recent advances in miniaturization and the creation of low-power circuits, combined with small-sized batteries have made the development of wireless sensor networks a working reality. Lately, the production of cheap complementary metal-oxide semiconductor cameras and microphones, which are able to capture rich multimedia content, gave birth to what is called Wireless Multimedia Sensor Networks (WMSNs). WMSNs will boost the capabilities of current wireless sensor networks, and will fuel several novel applications, like multimedia surveillance sensor networks. WMSNs introduce several new research challenges, mainly related to mechanisms to deliver application-level Quality-of-Service (e.g., latency minimization). To address this goal in an environment with extreme resource constraints, with variable channel capacity and with requirements for multimedia in-network processing, the caching of multimedia data, exploiting the cooperation among sensor nodes is vital. This article presents a cooperative caching solution particularly suitable for WMSNs. The proposed caching solution exploits sensor nodes which reside in “positions” of the network that allow them to forward packets or communicate decisions within short latency. These so-called “mediator” nodes are selected dynamically, so as to avoid the creation of hot-spots in the communication and the depletion of their energy. The mediators are not more powerful than the rest of the nodes, but they have some special role in implementing the cooperation among the sensors. The proposed cooperative caching protocol includes components for locating cached data as well as for implementing data purging out of the sensor caches. The proposed solution is evaluated extensively in an advanced simulation environment, and it is compared to the state-of-the-art cooperative caching algorithm for mobile ad hoc networks. The results confirm that the proposed caching mechanism prevails over its competitor.


modeling, analysis, and simulation on computer and telecommunication systems | 2009

On the structure and evolution of vehicular networks

George Pallis; Dimitrios Katsaros; Marios D. Dikaiakos; Nicholas Loulloudes; Leandros Tassiulas

Vehicular ad hoc networks have emerged recently as a platform to support intelligent inter-vehicle communication and improve traffic safety and performance. The road-constrained and high mobility of the vehicles, their unbounded power source, and the emergence of roadside wireless infrastructures make VANETs a challenging research topic. A key to the development of protocols for intervehicle communication and services lies in the knowledge of the topological characteristics of the VANET communication graph. This article provides answers to the general question: how does a VANET communication graph look like over time and space? This study is the first one that examines a very large-scale VANET graph and conducts a thorough investigation of its topological characteristics using several metrics, not examined in previous studies. Our work characterizes a VANET graph at the connectivity (link) level, quantifies the notion of “qualitative” nodes as required by routing and dissemination protocols, and examines the existence and evolution of communities (dense clusters of vehicles) in the VANET. Several latent facts about the VANET graph are revealed and incentives for their exploitation in protocol design are examined.


IEEE Computer | 2013

Detecting Influential Spreaders in Complex, Dynamic Networks

Pavlos Basaras; Dimitrios Katsaros; Leandros Tassiulas

A hybrid of node degree and k-shell index is more effective at identifying influential spreaders and has less computational overhead than either of these traditional measures.


ACM Transactions on Modeling and Computer Simulation | 2010

CDNsim: A simulation tool for content distribution networks

Konstantinos Stamos; George Pallis; Athena Vakali; Dimitrios Katsaros; Antonis Sidiropoulos; Yannis Manolopoulos

Content distribution networks (CDNs) have gained considerable attention in the past few years. Hence there is need for developing frameworks for carrying out CDN simulations. In this article we present a modeling and simulation framework for CDNs, called CDNsim. CDNsim has been designated to provide a realistic simulation for CDNs, simulating the surrogate servers, the TCP/IP protocol, and the main CDN functions. The main advantages of this tool are its high performance, its extensibility, and its user interface, which is used to configure its parameters. CDNsim provides an automated environment for conducting experiments and extracting client, server, and network statistics. The purpose of CDNsim is to be used as a testbed for CDN evaluation and experimentation. This is quite useful to both the research community (to experiment with new CDN data management techniques), and for CDN developers (to evaluate profits on prior certain CDN installations).

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Yannis Manolopoulos

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Antonis Sidiropoulos

Alexander Technological Educational Institute of Thessaloniki

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Nikos Dimokas

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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