Sonification of a Network's Self-Organized Criticality
Paul Vickers, Chris Laing, Tom Fairfax

TL;DR
This paper introduces a real-time sonification system that audibly represents a network's self-organized criticality, aiming to alert administrators to normal and abnormal traffic behaviors in complex data environments.
Contribution
It combines sonification with the concept of self-organized criticality to develop an innovative auditory alert system for network management.
Findings
System successfully detects critical network states
Real-time auditory alerts improve monitoring efficiency
Potential to prevent network failures through early warnings
Abstract
Communication networks involve the transmission and reception of large volumes of data. Research indicates that network traffic volumes will continue to increase. These traffic volumes will be unprecedented and the behaviour of global information infrastructures when dealing with these data volumes is unknown. It has been shown that complex systems (including computer networks) exhibit self-organized criticality under certain conditions. Given the possibility in such systems of a sudden and spontaneous system reset the development of techniques to inform system administrators of this behaviour could be beneficial. This article focuses on the combination of two dissimilar research concepts, namely sonification (a form of auditory display) and self-organized criticality (SOC). A system is described that sonifies in real time an information infrastructure's self-organized criticality to…
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