3,190 research outputs found
Requirements and Tools for Variability Management
Explicit and software-supported Business Process Management has become the core infrastructure of any medium and large organization that has a need to be efficient and effective. The number of processes of a single organization can be very high, furthermore, they might be very similar, be in need of momentary change, or evolve frequently. If the ad-hoc adaptation and customization of processes is currently the dominant way, it clearly is not the best. In fact, providing tools for supporting the explicit management of variation in processes (due to customization or evolution needs) has a profound impact on the overall life-cycle of processes in organizations. Additionally, with the increasing adoption of Service-Oriented Architectures, the infrastructure to support automatic reconfiguration and adaptation of business process is solid.
In this paper, after defining variability in business process management, we consider the requirements for explicit variation handling for (service based) business process systems. eGovernment serves as an illustrative example of reuse. In this case study, all local municipalities need to implement the same general legal process while adapting it to the local business practices and IT infrastructure needs. Finally, an evaluation of existing tools for explicit variability management is provided with respect to the requirements identified.
Graph-based real-time fault diagnostics
A real-time fault detection and diagnosis capability is absolutely crucial in the design of large-scale space systems. Some of the existing AI-based fault diagnostic techniques like expert systems and qualitative modelling are frequently ill-suited for this purpose. Expert systems are often inadequately structured, difficult to validate and suffer from knowledge acquisition bottlenecks. Qualitative modelling techniques sometimes generate a large number of failure source alternatives, thus hampering speedy diagnosis. In this paper we present a graph-based technique which is well suited for real-time fault diagnosis, structured knowledge representation and acquisition and testing and validation. A Hierarchical Fault Model of the system to be diagnosed is developed. At each level of hierarchy, there exist fault propagation digraphs denoting causal relations between failure modes of subsystems. The edges of such a digraph are weighted with fault propagation time intervals. Efficient and restartable graph algorithms are used for on-line speedy identification of failure source components
Translation-based Constraint Answer Set Solving
We solve constraint satisfaction problems through translation to answer set
programming (ASP). Our reformulations have the property that unit-propagation
in the ASP solver achieves well defined local consistency properties like arc,
bound and range consistency. Experiments demonstrate the computational value of
this approach.Comment: Self-archived version for IJCAI'11 Best Paper Track submissio
Implementation of a Port-graph Model for Finance
In this paper we examine the process involved in the design and
implementation of a port-graph model to be used for the analysis of an
agent-based rational negligence model. Rational negligence describes the
phenomenon that occurred during the financial crisis of 2008 whereby investors
chose to trade asset-backed securities without performing independent
evaluations of the underlying assets. This has contributed to motivating the
search for more effective and transparent tools in the modelling of the capital
markets.
This paper shall contain the details of a proposal for the use of a visual
declarative language, based on strategic port-graph rewriting, as a visual
modelling tool to analyse an asset-backed securitisation market.Comment: In Proceedings TERMGRAPH 2018, arXiv:1902.0151
Constraint-Based Qualitative Simulation
We consider qualitative simulation involving a finite set of qualitative
relations in presence of complete knowledge about their interrelationship. We
show how it can be naturally captured by means of constraints expressed in
temporal logic and constraint satisfaction problems. The constraints relate at
each stage the 'past' of a simulation with its 'future'. The benefit of this
approach is that it readily leads to an implementation based on constraint
technology that can be used to generate simulations and to answer queries about
them.Comment: 10 pages, to appear at the conference TIME 200
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