Journal article icon

Journal article

PEACE-ful web event extraction and processing as bi-temporal mutable events

Abstract:
The web is the largest bulletin board of the world. Events of all types, from flight arrivals to business meetings, are announced on this board. Tracking and reacting to such event announcements, however, is a tedious manual task, only slightly alleviated by email or similar notifications. Announcements are published with human readers in mind, and updates or delayed announcements are frequent. These characteristics have hampered attempts at automatic tracking.
PEACE provides the first integrated framework for event processing on top of web event ads, consisting of event extraction, complex event processing, and action execution in response to these events. Given a schema of the events to be tracked, the framework populates this schema by extracting events from announcement sources. This extraction is performed by little programs called wrappers which produce the events including updates and retractions. PEACE then queries these events to detect complex events, often combining announcements from multiple sources. To deal with updates and delayed announcements, PEACE’s schemas are bitemporal, as to distinguish between occurrence and detection time. This allows complex event specifications to track updates and to react upon differences in occurrence and detection time. In case of new, changing, or deleted events, PEACE allows to execute actions, such as tweeting or sending out email notifi- cations. Actions are typically specified as web interactions, e.g., to fill and submit a form with attributes of the triggering event.
Our evaluation shows that PEACE’s processing is dominated by the time needed for accessing the web to extract events and perform actions, allotting to 97.4%. Thus, PEACE requires only 2.6% overhead, and therefore, the complex event processor scales well even with moderate resources. We further show that simple and reasonable restrictions on complex event specifications and the timing of constituent events suffice to guarantee that PEACE only requires a constant buffer to process arbitrarily many event announcements.
Publication status:
In press
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions

Access Document

Files:

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Computer Science
Role:
Author
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Computer Science
Role:
Author
More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Computer Science
Role:
Author


More from this funder
Grant:
FP7/2007-2013) Grant DIADEM, no. 246858


Publisher:
Association for Computing Machinery
Journal:
ACM Transactions on the Web More from this journal
Publication date:
2016-01-01
Acceptance date:
2016-04-04
EISSN:
1559-114X
ISSN:
1559-1131


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:614895
UUID:
uuid:f52569f4-4b40-4709-af88-58f98380a3a3
Local pid:
pubs:614895
Source identifiers:
614895
Deposit date:
2016-04-11
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP