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Featured researches published by Matthias Thoma.


Archive | 2013

IoT Reference Architecture

Martin Bauer; Mathieu Boussard; Nicola Bui; Jourik De Loof; Carsten Magerkurth; Stefan Meissner; Andreas Nettsträter; Julinda Stefa; Matthias Thoma; Joachim Walewski

In this chapter we present our IoT Reference Architecture. This IoT Reference Architecture is, among others, designed as a reference for the generation of compliant IoT concrete architectures that are tailored to one’s specific needs. For other usages of the IoT Architectural Reference Model see Chap. 3.


ieee international conference on green computing and communications | 2012

On IoT-services: Survey, Classification and Enterprise Integration

Matthias Thoma; Sonja Meyer; Klaus Sperner; Stefan Meissner; Torsten Braun

This paper presents the results of a recent survey we conducted on the usage of services and service oriented architecture (SOA) within Internet of Things (IoT) related public funded projects and the research community, in general. We identified the lack of a coherent definition and classification of IoT services, as it would be necessary to contribute to service science in general. We therefore present a definition of IoT services and classify them based on the relationship to a physical entity and their lifecycle. The usefulness of this is abstraction is then shown on the example of business process modelling and Enterprise SOA integration.


network operations and management symposium | 2014

Managing things and services with semantics: A survey

Matthias Thoma; Torsten Braun; Carsten Magerkurth; Alexandru-Florian Antonescu

This paper presents a survey on the usage, opportunities and pitfalls of semantic technologies in the Internet of Things. The survey was conducted in the context of a semantic enterprise integration platform. In total we surveyed sixty-one individuals from industry and academia on their views and current usage of IoT technologies in general, and semantic technologies in particular. Our semantic enterprise integration platform aims for interoperability at a service level, as well as at a protocol level. Therefore, also questions regarding the use of application layer protocols, network layer protocols and management protocols were integrated into the survey. The survey suggests that there is still a lot of heterogeneity in IoT technologies, but first indications of the use of standardized protocols exist. Semantic technologies are being recognized as of potential use, mainly in the management of things and services. Nonetheless, the participants still see many obstacles which hinder the widespread use of semantic technologies: Firstly, a lack of training as traditional embedded programmers are not well aware of semantic technologies. Secondly, a lack of standardization in ontologies, which would enable interoperability and thirdly, a lack of good tooling support.


Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Software Engineering for Sensor Network Applications | 2012

Service descriptions and linked data for integrating WSNs into enterprise IT

Matthias Thoma; Klaus Sperner; Torsten Braun

This paper presents our ongoing work on enterprise IT integration of sensor networks based on the idea of service descriptions and applying linked data principles to them. We argue that using linked service descriptions facilitates a better integration of sensor nodes into enterprise IT systems and allows SOA principles to be used within the enterprise IT and within the sensor network itself.


wireless on demand network systems and service | 2014

Rest-based sensor networks with OData

Matthias Thoma; Theofilos Kakantousis; Torsten Braun

RESTful services gained a lot of attention recently, even in the enterprise world, which is traditionally more web-service centric. Data centric RESfFul services, as previously mainly known in web environments, established themselves as a second paradigm complementing functional WSDL-based SOA. In the Internet of Things, and in particular when talking about sensor motes, the Constraint Application Protocol (CoAP) is currently in the focus of both research and industry. In the enterprise world a protocol called OData (Open Data Proto-col) is becoming the future RESTful data access standard. To integrate sensor motes seamlessly into enterprise networks, an embedded OData implementation on top of CoAP is desirable, not requiring an intermediary gateway device. In this paper we introduce and evaluate an embedded OData implementation. We evaluate the OData protocol in terms of performance and energy consumption, considering different data encodings, and compare it to a pure CoAP implementation. We were able to demonstrate that the additional resources needed for an OData/JSON implementation are reasonable when aiming for enterprise interoperability, where OData is suggested to solve both the semantic and technical interoperability problems we have today when connecting systems.


5th International Working Conference on Enterprise Interoperability (IWEI) | 2013

Linked Services for Enabling Interoperability in the Sensing Enterprise

Matthias Thoma; Alexandru-Florian Antonescu; Theano Mintsi; Torsten Braun

In future, the so called “sensing enterprise”, as part of the Future Internet, will play a crucial role in the success or the failure of an enterprise. We present our vision of an enterprise interacting with the physical world based on a retail scenario. One of the main challenges is the interoperability not only between the enterprise IT systems themselves, but also between these systems and the sensing devices. We will argue that semantically enriched service descriptions, the so called linked services will ease interoperability between two or more enterprises IT systems, and between enterprise systems and the physical environment.


wireless communications and networking conference | 2014

Enterprise integration of smart objects using semantic service descriptions

Matthias Thoma; Torsten Braun; Carsten Magerkurth

Integrating physical objects (smart objects) and enterprise IT systems is still a labor intensive, mainly manual task done by domain experts. On one hand, enterprise IT backend systems are based on service oriented architectures (SOA) and driven by business rule engines or business process execution engines. Smart objects on the other hand are often programmed at very low levels. In this paper we describe an approach that makes the integration of smart objects with such backends systems easier. We introduce semantic endpoint descriptions based on Linked USDL. Furthermore, we show how different communication patterns can be integrated into these endpoint descriptions. The strength of our endpoint descriptions is that they can be used to automatically create REST or SOAP endpoints for enterprise systems, even if which they are not able to talk to the smart objects directly. We evaluate our proposed solution with CoAP, UDP and 6LoWPAN, as we anticipate the industry converge towards these standards. Nonetheless, our approach also allows easy integration with backend systems, even if no standardized protocol is used.


Archive | 2013

A Process for Generating Concrete Architectures

Mathieu Boussard; Stefan Meissner; Andreas Nettsträter; Alexis Olivereau; Alexander Salinas Segura; Matthias Thoma; Joachim Walewski

This chapter addresses the question of how to generate concrete architectures with the IoT ARM, which is one of the many uses to which an architectural reference model can be put (see Chaps. 3 and 4). This topic was already touched upon in Section “Generation of Architectures” in Chap. 3, but it is covered in greater depth in this section.


2015 8th IFIP Wireless and Mobile Networking Conference (WMNC) | 2015

An Application-Layer Restful Sleepy Nodes Implementation for Internet of Things Systems

Matthias Thoma; Triantafyllos Afouras; Torsten Braun

Two of the main issues in wireless industrial Internet of Things applications are interoperability and network lifetime. In this work we extend a semantic interoperability platform and introduce an application-layer sleepy nodes protocol that can leverage on information stored in semantic repositories. We propose an integration platform for managing the sleep states and an application layer protocol based upon the Constraint Application Layer protocol. We evaluate our system on windowing based task allocation strategies, aiming for lower overall energy consumption that results in higher network lifetime.


international conference on wireless communications and mobile computing | 2013

Linked services for M2M communication with Enterprise IT systems

Matthias Thoma; Alexandru-Florian Antonescu; Theano Mintsi; Torsten Braun

Linking the physical world to the Internet, also known as the Internet of Things, has increased available information and services in everyday life and in the Enterprise world. In Enterprise IT an increasing number of communication is done between IT backend systems and small IoT devices, for example sensor networks or RFID readers. This introduces some challenges in terms of complexity and integration. We are working on the integration of IoT devices into Enterprise IT by leveraging SOA techniques and Semantic Web technologies. We present a SOA based integration platform for connecting WSNs and large enterprise business processes. For ensuring interoperability our platform is based on Linked Services. These are thoroughly described, machine-readable, machine-reasonable service descriptions.

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Klaus Sperner

University of St. Gallen

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Sonja Meyer

University of St. Gallen

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