3,574 research outputs found
Ontology-based patterns for the integration of business processes and enterprise application architectures
Increasingly, enterprises are using Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) as an approach to Enterprise Application Integration (EAI). SOA has the potential to bridge
the gap between business and technology and to improve the reuse of existing applications and the interoperability with new ones. In addition to service architecture
descriptions, architecture abstractions like patterns and styles capture design knowledge and allow the reuse of successfully applied designs, thus improving the quality of
software. Knowledge gained from integration projects can be captured to build a repository of semantically enriched, experience-based solutions. Business patterns identify the interaction and structure between users, business processes, and data.
Specific integration and composition patterns at a more technical level address enterprise application integration and capture reliable architecture solutions. We use an
ontology-based approach to capture architecture and process patterns. Ontology techniques for pattern definition, extension and composition are developed and their
applicability in business process-driven application integration is demonstrated
Structured Knowledge Representation for Image Retrieval
We propose a structured approach to the problem of retrieval of images by
content and present a description logic that has been devised for the semantic
indexing and retrieval of images containing complex objects. As other
approaches do, we start from low-level features extracted with image analysis
to detect and characterize regions in an image. However, in contrast with
feature-based approaches, we provide a syntax to describe segmented regions as
basic objects and complex objects as compositions of basic ones. Then we
introduce a companion extensional semantics for defining reasoning services,
such as retrieval, classification, and subsumption. These services can be used
for both exact and approximate matching, using similarity measures. Using our
logical approach as a formal specification, we implemented a complete
client-server image retrieval system, which allows a user to pose both queries
by sketch and queries by example. A set of experiments has been carried out on
a testbed of images to assess the retrieval capabilities of the system in
comparison with expert users ranking. Results are presented adopting a
well-established measure of quality borrowed from textual information
retrieval
Model-driven engineering approach to design and implementation of robot control system
In this paper we apply a model-driven engineering approach to designing
domain-specific solutions for robot control system development. We present a
case study of the complete process, including identification of the domain
meta-model, graphical notation definition and source code generation for
subsumption architecture -- a well-known example of robot control architecture.
Our goal is to show that both the definition of the robot-control architecture
and its supporting tools fits well into the typical workflow of model-driven
engineering development.Comment: Presented at DSLRob 2011 (arXiv:cs/1212.3308
Multimethods and separate static typechecking in a language with C++-like object model
The goal of this paper is the description and analysis of multimethod
implementation in a new object-oriented, class-based programming language
called OOLANG. The implementation of the multimethod typecheck and selection,
deeply analyzed in the paper, is performed in two phases in order to allow
static typechecking and separate compilation of modules. The first phase is
performed at compile time, while the second is executed at link time and does
not require the modules' source code. OOLANG has syntax similar to C++; the
main differences are the absence of pointers and the realization of
polymorphism through subsumption. It adopts the C++ object model and supports
multiple inheritance as well as virtual base classes. For this reason, it has
been necessary to define techniques for realigning argument and return value
addresses when performing multimethod invocations.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figure
Knowledge infrastructures for software service architectures
Software development has become a distributed, collaborative process based on the assembly of off-the-shelf and purpose-built components or services. The selection of software services from service repositories and their integration into software system architectures, but also the development of services for these repositories requires an accessible information infrastructure that allows the description and comparison of these services. General knowledge relating to software development is equally important in this context as knowledge concerning the application domain of the software. Both form two pillars on which the structural and behavioural properties of software services can be addressed. We investigate how this information space for software services can be organized. Focal point are ontologies that, in addition to the usual static view on knowledge, also intrinsically addresses the dynamics, i.e. the behaviour of software. We relate our discussion to the Web context, looking at the Web Services Framework and the Semantic Web as the knowledge representation framework
Modelling the Semantic Web using a Type System
We present an approach for modeling the Semantic Web as a type system. By
using a type system, we can use symbolic representation for representing linked
data. Objects with only data properties and references to external resources
are represented as terms in the type system. Triples are represented
symbolically using type constructors as the predicates. In our type system, we
allow users to add analytics that utilize machine learning or knowledge
discovery to perform inductive reasoning over data. These analytics can be used
by the inference engine when performing reasoning to answer a query.
Furthermore, our type system defines a means to resolve semantic heterogeneity
on-the-fly
A semantical framework for the orchestration and choreography of web services
Web Services are software services that can be advertised by providers and invoked by customers using Web technologies. This concept is currently carried further to
address the composition of individual services through orchestration and choreography to services processes that communicate and interact with each other. We propose an ontology framework for these Web service processes that provides techniques for their description, matching, and composition. A description logic-based knowledge representation and reasoning framework provides the foundations. We will base this ontological framework on an operational model of service process behaviour and composition
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