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Perspectives in Conceptual Modeling: ER 2005 Workshop AOIS, BP-UML, CoMoGIS, eCOMO, and QoIS, Klagenfurt, Austria, October 24-28, 2005, Proceedings

Jacky Akoka ; Stephen W. Liddle ; Il-Yeol Song ; Michela Bertolotto ; Isabelle Comyn-Wattiau ; Willem-Jan van den Heuvel ; Manuel Kolp ; Juan Trujillo ; Christian Kop ; Heinrich C. Mayr (eds.)

En conferencia: 24º International Conference on Conceptual Modeling (ER) . Klagenfurt, Austria . October 24, 2005 - October 28, 2005

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems; Simulation and Modeling; Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet); Database Management; Information Storage and Retrieval; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-29395-8

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-32239-9

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Tutorial 4: Reasoning About Web Information Systems

Klaus-Dieter Schewe; Bernhard Thalheim

We will start with a brief introduction describing the various aspects of web information systems (WISs) such as purpose, usage, content, functionality, context, presentation. Following this we plan to present three major blocks (of more or less the same size) dealing with an overview of the co-design approach to WIS design, propositional reasoning about WISs, and consistency of WISs.

- Tutorials | Pp. 464-467

Tutorial 5: Schema and Data Translation

Paolo Atzeni

Many application settings involve the need to exchange information between heterogeneous frameworks. In the database world, we often use different systems to handle data, following different models, and we therefore need to translate data and their description from one to another. The problem has been considered for decades in our field, but definitive solutions are not yet available. The problem is relevant at the schema level (for example, every designer works with a conceptual model, such as ER or UML, and then translates the conceptual schema into a logical model, usually relational), and at the data level, when we have databases, and we want to translate them into some other system, which may be similar (for example, with a slightly different version of the relational model) or completely different (for example, XML documents).

Palabras clave: Target Schema; Definitive Solution; Schema Translation; Data Translation; Database World.

- Tutorials | Pp. 468-469

Tutorial 6: Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic Engineering Design Processes

Vadim Ermolayev; Vladimir Gorodetski; Eyck Jentzsch; Wolf-Ekkehard Matzke

Design – a signature of human intelligence – was always a great challenge for researches in various disciplines. For example, observations of how humans act in design produced several fundamental ideas in AI and DAI – automated problem solving and reasoning [3]. In return, the researchers as the broad community attacked the problems of design domain by attempting to engineer systems and infrastructures that are capable of supporting humans in accomplishing tasks that require intelligence. Quite a big piece of this stake is of course the challenge of designing the concepts and the models of different aspects in design. Moreover, from data and knowledge engineering perspective the problems of Conceptual Modeling are design problems per se: the problem of designing intelligent artifacts [3], or exploring the design space of intelligence [1][4].

Palabras clave: Design Domain; Silver Bullet; Engineering Design Process; Automate Problem; Specific Application Area.

- Tutorials | Pp. 470-472

Tutorial 7: Modeling Enterprise Applications

Dirk Draheim

Enterprise applications are large and complex. Therefore, requirements elicitation and system analysis is especially important for the success of enterprise application development projects. Independent from the project organization, i.e., the used software process model, well-defined and easy-to-understand documents and work products are a cornerstone of successful communication of system documentation in each project team, both for the communication between the system analyst and the developer and the communication between the system analyst and the domain expert.

- Tutorials | Pp. 473-474