| G. D. Michelis et al. Cooperative information systems: A manifesto. submitted for publication, 1996. |
....Systems. 1 Introduction The research field of Cooperative Information Systems intends to develop concepts, techniques and methodologies for building information systems which integrate legacy software systems and align them with current business processes and organizational objectives [8]. This paper focuses on one aspect of this integration, namely the integration of existing information sources in the delivery of information services. The information sources may include databases, formatted or ASCII files and other computer based data. These sources may be multiple, distributed ....
G. D. Michelis et al. Cooperative information systems: A manifesto. submitted for publication, 1996.
.... our viewpoint Dioeerent kinds of automated support systems have been introduced so far to deal with the inherent complexity of KR R at the conceptual level [23, 25, 37, 2] Most CM A approaches view IKMEs as tools which can improve the quality of a domain model by supporting analysis activities [9, 6, 17]. However, the role and the eoeectiveness of these tools are not yet widely recognized. This is because most IKMEs cannot be easily extended to deal with new kinds of meta concepts and inference rules. Although this problem has been already pointed [30, 7, 31, 21] no common solution has been ....
G. De Michelis et al. Cooperative Information Systems: A Manifesto. In Cooperative Information Systems: Trend & Directions. Academic Press, 1997.
....Related Approaches 30 Federated Information Systems April 1999 6. 4 Cooperative Information Systems In the 90s the new term cooperative information systems (CoopIS) was born for the vision of next generation information systems (see the conference CoopIS, e.g. PS 98] The manifesto [MDJ 98] proposes a framework for CoopIS with three interrelated facets: The system facet includes information, workflow, and other computer based systems supporting some specific tasks. Within the system facet, problems of heterogeneity and interoperation of systems have to be solved. The group ....
....are reached. These three facets show that CoopIS consider information systems technologies as we have discussed them in this paper in a larger social and organizational context. Similar to the I 3 vision, the coordination and cooperation is more important than a simple sharing of information. MDJ 98] shows that change management and continuous evolution is the central issue related to and relating all three facets. We noted the importance of evolution which has to be considered when information systems are designed, too. Here much more work has to be done, wherein we also will concentrate on ....
G. De Michelis, E. Dubois, M. Jarke, F. Matthes, J. Mylopoulos, M.P. Papazoglou, K. Pohl, J. Schmidt, C. Woo, E. Yu, Cooperative Information Systems: a Manifesto, in: [PS 98], pp. 315-363, 1998.
....related publications. In addition to citations also full text articles are available on line. Access to these articles is by subscription and payment only. Note that both Internet Marketplaces and electronic commerce are examples of the more general framework of cooperative information systems (De Michelis et al. 1997). Broadly speaking, Internet Marketplace services can be classified as either being a data or computational service. While data services allow customers to access data sources such as databases, web servers, and file servers, computational services permit customers to use software modules and ....
....definitions, i.e. capabilities of available services and their interrelationships. Such a global schema implies that SMART providers have to supply wrappers which map global interface definitions into local ones. The Type and Relationship Registry is indispensable for SMART s planning service (Gaede 1997) that accepts a declarative request and automatically determines from which site to acquire the necessary data and where to perform certain computations. Even though for both DecisionNet and SMART the use of repositories has been proposed, no detailed specification has been published to the best ....
De Michelis, G., E. Dubois, M. Jarke, F. Matthes, J. Mylopoulos, M. Papazoglou, K. Pohl, J. Schmidt, C. Woo, and E. Yu (1997). "Cooperative Information Systems: A Manifesto". In Cooperative Information System: Trends and Directions. Academic Press.
.... Information Systems, submitted to the VLDB 96 y Address: Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, 6 King s College Road, Toronto, Canada M5S 3H5; Phone: 416) 978 7330; Fax: 416) 978 1455; e mail: avigal cs.toronto.edu 1 The model ffl Cooperative information systems (CISs) [5] are information systems with data dependencies and interoperability relationships. For example, a federated database [6] consists of CISs, where each is a localized heterogeneous database, connected through computer networks for the purpose of updating and retrieving views; a global information ....
G.D. Michelis et al. Cooperative information systems: A manifesto. In to appear in the Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Cooperative Information systems, June 1996.
....inter organizational workflows involving customers, suppliers, tax authorities, banks, etc. The objective of our research is to identify abstractions and architectural patterns which help to design, construct and maintain software components in such a cooperative information system environment [8, 9, 29]. Currently, there are two different views on what constitutes a good approach to modeling business processes: on the one hand the object oriented approach originating from software engineering and on the other hand a process and content based approach that allows for designing business ....
Giorgio De Michelis, Eric Dubois, Matthias Jarke, Florian Matthes, John Mylopoulos, Mike Papazoglou, Klaus Pohl, Joachim Schmidt, Carson Woo, and Eric Yu. Cooperative information systems: A manifesto. In Mike P. Papazoglou and Gunther Schlageter, editors, Cooperative Information System: Trends and Directions. Academic Press (1997).
....and formal organizations. Recently, this has begun to change due to massive complaints by user organizations that their central needs are not being adequately addressed by information technology. One of the responses raising to this challenge is the vision of cooperative information systems (CIS [3, 10, 5]) which see information systems as a communications medium among user groups in and across organizations. On one hand, this brings groupware and organizational research into the information systems fields. On the formal organization system integration 1 2 3 user group 1 user group 2 user group ....
G. De Michelis, E. Dubois, M. Jarke, F. Matthes, J. Mylopoulos, K. Pohl, J. Schmidt, C. Woo, and E. Yu. Cooperative Information Systems: A Manifesto. In 4th Intl. Conf. on Cooperative Information Systems, Brussels, Belgium, 1996.
No context found.
G. D. Michelis et al. Cooperative information systems: A manifesto. submitted for publication, 1996.
No context found.
G. De Michelis, E. Dubois, M. Jarke, F. Matthes, J. Mylopoulos, M.P. Papazoglou, K. Pohl, J. Schmidt, C. Woo, and E. Yu. Cooperative information systems: a manifesto. In Cooperative Information Systems, pages 315-363. Academic Press, 1998.
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