Computing and Information Systems - Research Publications

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    Business Process Model Abstraction
    Polyvyanyy, A ; Smirnov, S ; Weske, M ; Vom Brocke, J ; Rosemann, M (Springer-Verlag, 2010-01-01)
    In order to execute, study, or improve operating procedures companies document them as business process models. Often business process analysts capture every single exception handling or alternative task handling scenario within a model. Such a tendency results in large process specifications. The core process logic becomes hidden in numerous modeling constructs. To fulfill different tasks companies develop several model variants of the same business process at different abstraction levels. Afterwards, maintenance of such model groups involves a lot of synchronization effort and is erroneous. We propose an abstraction technique that allows generalization of process models. Business process model abstraction assumes a detailed model of a process to be available and derives coarse grained models from it. The task of abstraction is to tell significant model elements from insignificant ones and to reduce the latter. We propose to learn insignificant process elements from supplementary model information, e.g., task execution time or frequency of task occurrence. Finally, we discuss a mechanism for user control of the model abstraction level - an abstraction slider.
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    Sensor web: Integration of sensor networks with web and cyber infrastructure
    Kobialka, T ; Buyya, R ; Deng, P ; Kulik, L ; Palaniswami, M (IGI Global, 2010-12-01)
    As sensor network deployments grow and mature there emerge a common set of operations and transformations. These can be grouped into a conceptual framework called Sensor Web. Sensor Web combines cyber infrastructure with a Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) and sensor networks to provide access to heterogeneous sensor resources in a deployment independent manner. In this chapter we present the Open Sensor Web Architecture (OSWA), a platform independent middleware for developing sensor applications. OSWA is built upon a uniform set of operations and standard data representations as defined in the Sensor Web Enablement Method (SWE) by the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC). OSWA uses open source and grid technologies to meet the challenging needs of collecting and analyzing observational data and making it accessible for aggregation, archiving and decision making.
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    Business Analytics and Competitive Advantage: A Review and a Research Agenda
    Sharma, R ; Reynolds, P ; Scheepers, R ; Seddon, PB ; Shanks, G ; Respicio, A ; Adam, F ; PhillipsWren, G ; Teixeira, C ; Telhada, J (IOS PRESS, 2010)
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    Girard's Wharf
    Harris, KJH (Dictionary of Sydney Trust, 2010)