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Artificial Intelligence for the Internet of Everything considers the foundations, metrics and applications of IoE systems. It covers whether devices and IoE systems should speak only to each other, to humans or to both. Further, the book explores how IoE systems affect targeted audiences (researchers, machines, robots, users) and society, as well as future ecosystems. It examines the meaning, value and effect that IoT has had and may have on ordinary life, in business, on the battlefield, and with the rise of intelligent and autonomous systems. Based on an artificial intelligence (AI) perspective, this book addresses how IoE affects sensing, perception, cognition and behavior.

Each chapter addresses practical, measurement, theoretical and research questions about how these “things” may affect individuals, teams, society or each other. Of particular focus is what may happen when these “things” begin to reason, communicate and act autonomously on their own, whether independently or interdependently with other “things”.

  • Considers the foundations, metrics and applications of IoE systems
  • Debates whether IoE systems should speak to humans and each other
  • Explores how IoE systems affect targeted audiences and society
  • Discusses theoretical IoT ecosystem models

Table of Contents

  1. Cover image
  2. Title page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Copyright
  5. Contributors
  6. Chapter 1: Introduction
  7. Chapter 2: Uncertainty Quantification in Internet of Battlefield Things
  8. Chapter 3: Intelligent Autonomous Things on the Battlefield
  9. Chapter 4: Active Inference in Multiagent Systems: Context-Driven Collaboration and Decentralized Purpose-Driven Team Adaptation
  10. Chapter 5: Policy Issues Regarding Implementations of Cyber Attack: Resilience Solutions for Cyber Physical Systems
  11. Chapter 6: Trust and Human-Machine Teaming: A Qualitative Study
  12. Chapter 7: The Web of Smart Entities—Aspects of a Theory of the Next Generation of the Internet of Things
  13. Chapter 8: Raising Them Right: AI and the Internet of Big Things
  14. Chapter 9: The Value of Information and the Internet of Things
  15. Chapter 10: Would IOET Make Economics More Neoclassical or More Behavioral? Richard Thaler’s Prediction, a Revisit
  16. Chapter 11: Accessing Validity of Argumentation of Agents of the Internet of Everything
  17. Chapter 12: Distributed Autonomous Energy Organizations: Next-Generation Blockchain Applications for Energy Infrastructure
  18. Chapter 13: Compositional Models for Complex Systems
  19. Chapter 14: Meta-Agents: Using Multi-Agent Networks to Manage Dynamic Changes in the Internet of Things
  20. Index
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