20,731 research outputs found
Reconciliation of object interaction models
This paper presents Reconciliation+, a
tool-supported method which identifies overlaps
between models of different object interactions
expressed as UML sequence and/or collaboration
diagrams, checks whether the overlapping elements
of these models satisfy specific consistency rules,
and guides developers in handling these
inconsistencies. The method also keeps track of the
decisions made and the actions taken in the process
of managing inconsistencies
Resolving the Large-N Nuclear Potential Puzzle
The large nuclear potential puzzle arose because three- and
higher-meson exchange contributions to the nucleon-nucleon potential did not
automatically yield cancellations that make these contributions consistent with
the general large scaling rules for the potential. Here it is proposed
that the resolution to this puzzle is that the scaling rules only apply for
energy-independent potentials while all of the cases with apparent
inconsistencies were for energy-dependent potentials. It is shown explicitly
how energy-dependent potentials can have radically different large N behavior
than an equivalent energy-independent one. One class of three-meson graphs is
computed in which the contribution to the energy-independent potential is
consistent with the general large N rules even though the energy-dependent
potential is not.Comment: Corrections to the toy mode
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Actor perception in business use case modeling
Mainstream literature recognizes the validity and effectiveness of use cases as a technique for gathering and capturing system requirements. Use cases represent the driver of various modern development methods, mainly of object-oriented extraction, such as the Unified Process. Although the adoption of use cases proliferated in the context of software systems development, they are not as extensively employed in business modeling . The concept of business use case is not a novelty, but only recently did it begin to re-circulate in the literature and in case tools.
This paper examines the issues involved in adopting business use cases for capturing the functionality of an organization and proposes guidelines for their identification, packaging, and mapping to system use cases. The proposed guidelines are based on the principle of actor perception described in the paper. The application of this principle is exemplified with a worked example aimed at demonstrating the utility of the proposed guidelines and at clarifying the application of the principle of actor perception. The worked example is based on a series of workshops run at a major UK financial institution
Ontology-based methodology for error detection in software design
Improving the quality of a software design with the goal of producing a high quality software product continues to grow in importance due to the costs that result from poorly designed software. It is commonly accepted that multiple design views are required in order to clearly specify the required functionality of software. There is universal agreement as to the importance of identifying inconsistencies early in the software design process, but the challenge is how to reconcile the representations of the diverse views to ensure consistency. To address the problem of inconsistencies that occur across multiple design views, this research introduces the Methodology for Objects to Agents (MOA). MOA utilizes a new ontology, the Ontology for Software Specification and Design (OSSD), as a common information model to integrate specification knowledge and design knowledge in order to facilitate the interoperability of formal requirements modeling tools and design tools, with the end goal of detecting inconsistency errors in a design. The methodology, which transforms designs represented using the Unified Modeling Language (UML) into representations written in formal agent-oriented modeling languages, integrates object-oriented concepts and agent-oriented concepts in order to take advantage of the benefits that both approaches can provide. The OSSD model is a hierarchical decomposition of software development concepts, including ontological constructs of objects, attributes, behavior, relations, states, transitions, goals, constraints, and plans. The methodology includes a consistency checking process that defines a consistency framework and an Inter-View Inconsistency Detection technique. MOA enhances software design quality by integrating multiple software design views, integrating object-oriented and agent-oriented concepts, and defining an error detection method that associates rules with ontological properties
Uniqueness of infrared asymptotics in Landau gauge Yang-Mills theory
We uniquely determine the infrared asymptotics of Green functions in Landau
gauge Yang-Mills theory. They have to satisfy both,
Dyson-Schwinger equations and functional renormalisation group equations.
Then, consistency fixes the relation between the infrared power laws of these
Green functions. We discuss consequences for the interpretation of recent
results from lattice QCD.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
1+1 Dimensional Yang-Mills Theories in Light-Cone Gauge
In 1+1 dimensions two different formulations exist of SU(N) Yang Mills
theories in light-cone gauge; only one of them gives results which comply with
the ones obtained in Feynman gauge. Moreover the theory, when considered in
1+(D-1) dimensions, looks discontinuous in the limit D=2. All those features
are proven in Wilson loop calculations as well as in the study of the
bound state integral equation in the large N limit.Comment: Invited report at the Workshop "Low Dimensional Field Theory",
Telluride (CO), Aug. 5-17 1996; 16 pages, latex, no figures To appear in
International Journal of Modern Physics A minor misprints correcte
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