Context awareness

Context awareness refers, in information and communication technologies, to a capability to take into account the situation of entities,[1] which may be users or devices, but are not limited to those. Location is only the most obvious element of this situation. Narrowly defined for mobile devices, context awareness does thus generalize location awareness. Whereas location may determine how certain processes around a contributing device operate, context may be applied more flexibly with mobile users, especially with users of smart phones. Context awareness originated as a term from ubiquitous computing or as so-called pervasive computing which sought to deal with linking changes in the environment with computer systems, which are otherwise static. The term has also been applied to business theory in relation to contextual application design and business process management issues.[2]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference dey2001 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Rosemann, M., & Recker, J. (2006). "Context-aware process design: Exploring the extrinsic drivers for process flexibility" (PDF). In T. Latour; M. Petit (eds.). 18th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering. Proceedings of Workshops and Doctoral Consortium. Luxembourg: Namur University Press. pp. 149–158.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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