| Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J. , Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D., and Ter Hofstede, A., 2001, "Towards a Semantic Framework for Service Description," Proceedings of the 9th IFIP Conference on Database Semantics. |
....amount of recent research has focused on effective discovery of services, which is the key required capability of the Web services framework. The discovery mechanisms suggested to improve keyword based discovery range from categorization and domain independent characterization of services [19] to better techniques exploiting semantic representations of the services. Trastour et al. 20] analyses the problem of matchmaking and highlights the need for metadata for better results and suggests requirements for advanced matchmaking as high degree of flexibility and expressiveness; ability ....
Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J., Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D. and Hofstede, A. Towards a Semantic Framework for Service description. In Proc. of the 9th Int. Conf. on Database Semantics, Hong-Kong, April 2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
....in a way that is somehow more useful to the ultimate end user than the individual services. The particular services to be combined are never specified at the composite level, but rather a characterization of desired outcome is provided to the composite which then selects from a number of vendors [22] An example of this from conventional business is a travel agency, where a customer specifies a sort of trip required, and the travel agent selects or assists in selecting specific providers such as an airline or hotel. McIlraith and Son [41] propose that for the semantic Web, composite services ....
Marlon Dumas, Justin O'Sullivan, Mitra Heravizadeh, David Edmond, and Arthur ter Hofstede. Towards a semantic framework for service description. In In Proceedings of the IFIP Conference on Database Semantics, Hong Kong, April 2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
.... When it comes to service discovery, one may argue that this could be solved by the use of web services and the Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration scheme(UDDI) However, unlike ontologies, UDDI currently lacks the mature dynamism that is needed in an open heterogeneous environment [5] wherein computing entities may come and go. For this reason, we chose to use agents with ontologies in addressing service discovery. The service ontology in our architecture is used by the matchmaker and the science agent as a vehicle for mutually discovering services dynamically without a hard ....
M. Dumas, J. O'Sullivan, M. Heravizadeh, D. Edmond, and A. Hofstede. Towards a semantic framework for service description. In Proc. of the 9th Int. Conf. on Database Semantics, Hong-Kong, April 2001.
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M. Dumas, J. O'Sullivan, M. Heravizadeh, D. Edmond, and A. ter Hofstede, "Towards a semantic framework for service description," in Proceedings of the 9th International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Conference on Database Semantics---Semantic Issues in e-Commerce Systems, Hong Kong, China, 2001, Kluwer Academic Publishers: Dordrecht.
....in order to share costs, skills and resources. By service, we mean any class of immaterial products with a semantically well defined functionality, whose provision involves the execution of a set of human and or computational activities within an organisation, or across several organisations [6]. Examples of services include booking a flight, or translating a document. An example of integrated (or composite) service is a travel packaging web site federating cooperative and competitive services for flight bookings, accommodation bookings, and car rentals. An e service is a service which ....
M. Dumas, J. O'Sullivan, M. Heravizadeh, D. Edmond, and A. ter Hofstede. Towards a semantic framework for service description. In Proc. of the 9th Int. Conf. on Database Semantics, Hong-Kong, April 2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
.... to share costs, skills and resources in offering value added services (virtual enterprises) By service, we mean any class of immaterial products whose provision involves the execution of a set of human and or computational activities within an organisation, or across several organisations [8]. An e service is a service which is accessible through electronic means (e.g. a web interface) In a nutshell, a service provides a semantically well defined functionality that allows users to access and perform tasks offered, e.g. by business applications. Typical examples of services include ....
M. Dumas, J. O'Sullivan, M. Heravizadeh, D. Edmond, and A. ter Hofstede. Towards a semantic framework for service description. In Proc. of the 9th Int. Conf. on Database Semantics, Hong-Kong, April 2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
No context found.
Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J. , Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D., and Ter Hofstede, A., 2001, "Towards a Semantic Framework for Service Description," Proceedings of the 9th IFIP Conference on Database Semantics.
No context found.
Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J., Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D. and ter Hofstede, A. Towards a semantic framework for service description In Proc. of the IFIP Conference on Database Semantics, Hong Kong, Kluwer Academic Pub., April 2001
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Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J., Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D., and ter Hofstede, A. Towards a semantic framework for service description. http://sky.fit.qut.edu.au/#dumas/publications.html, April 2001.
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Dumas, M., O'Sullivan, J., Heravizadeh, M., Edmond, D., Hofstede, A.: Towards a semantic framework for service description. In: 9th International Conference on Database Semantics, Hong-Kong, Kluwer Academic Publishers (2001)
No context found.
M. Dumas, J. O'Sullivan, M. Heravizadeh, D. Edmond, and A. Hofstede. Towards a semantic framework for service description. In Proc. of the IFIP Conference on Database Semantics. Kluwer Academic Publishers, April 2001.
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