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The increasing penetration of IT in organizations calls for an
integrative perspective on enterprises and their supporting
information systems. MERODE offers an intuitive and practical
approach to enterprise modelling and using these models as core for
building enterprise information systems. From a business analyst
perspective, benefits of the approach are its simplicity and the
possibility to evaluate the consequences of modeling choices
through fast prototyping, without requiring any technical
experience. The focus on domain modelling ensures the development
of a common language for talking about essential business concepts
and of a shared understanding of business rules. On the
construction side, experienced benefits of the approach are a clear
separation between specification and implementation, more generic
and future-proof systems, and an improved insight in the cost of
changes. A first distinguishing feature is the method's grounding
in process algebra provides clear criteria and practical support
for model quality. Second, the use of the concept of business
events provides a deep integration between structural and
behavioral aspects. The clear and intuitive semantics easily extend
to application integration (COTS software and Web Services).
Students and practitioners are the book's main target audience, as
both groups will benefit from its practical advice on how to create
complete models which combine structural and behavioral views of a
system-to-be and which can readily be transformed into code, and on
how to evaluate the quality of those models. In addition,
researchers in the area of conceptual or enterprise modelling will
find a concise overview of the main findings related to the MERODE
project. The work is complemented by a wealth of extra material on
the author's web page at KU Leuven, including a free CASE tool with
code generator, a collection of cases with solutions, and a set of
domain modelling patterns that have been developed on the basis of
the method's use in industry and government.
The increasing penetration of IT in organizations calls for an
integrative perspective on enterprises and their supporting
information systems. MERODE offers an intuitive and practical
approach to enterprise modelling and using these models as core for
building enterprise information systems. From a business analyst
perspective, benefits of the approach are its simplicity and the
possibility to evaluate the consequences of modeling choices
through fast prototyping, without requiring any technical
experience. The focus on domain modelling ensures the development
of a common language for talking about essential business concepts
and of a shared understanding of business rules. On the
construction side, experienced benefits of the approach are a clear
separation between specification and implementation, more generic
and future-proof systems, and an improved insight in the cost of
changes. A first distinguishing feature is the method’s grounding
in process algebra provides clear criteria and practical support
for model quality. Second, the use of the concept of business
events provides a deep integration between structural and
behavioral aspects. The clear and intuitive semantics easily extend
to application integration (COTS software and Web Services).
Students and practitioners are the book’s main target audience,
as both groups will benefit from its practical advice on how to
create complete models which combine structural and behavioral
views of a system-to-be and which can readily be transformed into
code, and on how to evaluate the quality of those models. In
addition, researchers in the area of conceptual or enterprise
modelling will find a concise overview of the main findings related
to the MERODE project. The work is complemented by a wealth of
extra material on the author’s web page at KU Leuven, including a
free CASE tool with code generator, a collection of cases with
solutions, and a set of domain modelling patterns that have been
developed on the basis of the method’s use in industry and
government.
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Advanced Information Systems Engineering - 34th International Conference, CAiSE 2022, Leuven, Belgium, June 6-10, 2022, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2022)
Xavier Franch, Geert Poels, Frederik Gailly, Monique Snoeck
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R2,277
Discovery Miles 22 770
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 34th
International Conference on Advanced Information Systems
Engineering, CAiSE 2022, which was held in Leuven, Belgium, during
June 6-10, 2022.The 31 full papers included in these proceedings
were selected from 203 submissions. They were organized in topical
sections as follows: Process mining; sustainable and explainable
applications; tools and methods to support research and design;
process modeling; natural language processing techniques in IS
engineering; process monitoring and simulation; graph and network
models; model analysis and comprehension; recommender systems;
conceptual models, metamodels and taxonomies; and services
engineering and digitalization.
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The Practice of Enterprise Modeling - 10th IFIP WG 8.1. Working Conference, PoEM 2017, Leuven, Belgium, November 22-24, 2017, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2017)
Geert Poels, Frederik Gailly, Estefania Serral Asensio, Monique Snoeck
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R2,365
Discovery Miles 23 650
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This volume constitutes the proceedings of the 10th IFIP WG 8.1
Conference on the Practice of Enterprise Modeling held in November
2017 in Leuven, Belgium. The conference was created by the
International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working
Group 8.1 to offer a forum for knowledge transfer and experience
sharing between the academic and practitioner communities. The 20
full papers and 4 short papers accepted were carefully reviewed and
selected from 70 submissions. They include research results,
practitioner/experience reports and work-in-progress papers and
were presented in 8 sessions covering diverse topics related to
enterprise modelling and its application in practice.
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