| Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., and Gruninger, M. (1996), "An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour." Computers in Industry, 1996, Vol. 29, pp. 123-134. |
....evaluate the information depending on the specific situation. Alternatively, it is possible to connect the two steps directly to include the ranking as a parameter in the utility function to determine the best team. 5. Related Work An important contribution in modelling enterprises was made in [8], where a formal description of an enterprise was given. This work was later developed to describe how the structures of an enterprise could be linked to its behaviour, by using agents and ontologies [9] Although this work does not address the particular concept of VEs, it provided the foundation ....
Fox, M., Barbuceanu, M. and Gruninger, M., An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structures and Behaviour, Computers in Industry, Vol. 29, 1996, p. 123-134.
....of the authors, no dedicated methodology has been developed for specification of design ontologies. There are proposals however for specification of general ontologies (e.g. KIF, Ontolingua) and for development of ontologies for applications other than design (e.g. enterprise modelling Fox, M. S. et al 1996). The facts mentioned in Sub section 1.2. imply that a design ontology has to merge two conceptualization levels into one. Namely conceptualization has to cover the level of design concepts and the level of system of design concepts simultaneously. This requirement is unique for specification of ....
Fox, M. S., Barbuceanu, M., Gruninger, M., "An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour", Computers in Industry, Vol. 29, 1996, pp. 123-134.
....Sometimes, one only has the semantics inherent in a structured requirements document. In such cases, one can use a priori knowledge of commonly occurring requirements elements, called an ontolog y. Such ontological information specifies commonly occurring entities and their relationships[81][90] 192] 255] Using such an ontolog y, interaction analysis has two stages: 1) classify the requirements as instances of the ontolog y, 2) compare the classified requirements. Such analysis has been automated[253] Table 4. Basis of Requirement Relationships Type Description Example ....
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., and Gruninger, M., (1996), "An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour", Computers in Industr y, Vol. 29, pp. 123-134.
....a graphical context. The TOVE ontology currently spans knowledge of activity [Gruninger Fox 94] time, and causality, resources [Fadel 94] Fadel et al. 94] and more enterprise oriented knowledge such as cost [Tham et al. 94] quality [Kim Fox 94] Kim et al. 95] and organization Structure [Fox et al. 95] and agility [Atefi 95] The TOVE Testbed provides an environment for analyzing enterprise ontologies; it provides a model of an enterprise and tools for browsing, visualization, simulation, and deductive queries. In this paper we present a logical framework for the TOVE Enterprise Model. We ....
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., Gruninger, M. An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour, Fourth Workshop on Enabling Technologies-Infrastructures for Collaborative Enterprises,(West Virginia University 1995).
....Intelligence Knowledge Representation and Planning communities. Resources Inventory: General representation of resources, inventory, loca tion, etc. Fadel et al. 94] Organization Structure: Representation of positions, roles, departments, processes, goals, constraints, etc. Lee 88] Fox et al. 95] Yu et al. 96] Product Structure and Requirements: Borgo et al. 96] Linet al... 96] Liebig Roesner 96] Quality: Basic representations of quality in support of ISO9000, QFD, etc. Kim Fox 95] Cost: Representation of resource costs, activity costs, Activity based costing, etc. Tham ....
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., Gruninger, M., (1995), "An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour", Computers in Indust, Vol. 29, pp. 123-134.
....ontologies to support enterprise engineering. Since this must be a shared terminology for the enterprise that every application can jointly understand and use, the ontologies span knowledge of activity, time, and causality ( 8, 9] resources [10] cost [11] quality [12] organization structure [13], product [14] and agility [15] All of the TOVE ontologies are specified using KIF; for example, the following KIF sentence is the definition of the class of processor actions within the TOVE Resource Ontology: defrelation processor action ( a) exists ( r1 r2 r3) and (uses a r1) or ....
M.S. Fox, M. Barbuceanu, and M. Gruninger. An organisation ontology for enterprise modelling: Preliminary concepts for linking structure and behaviour. Computers in Industry, 29:123--134, 1995.
No context found.
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., Gruninger, M. (1995) An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour, Fourth Workshop on Enabling Technologies-Infrastructures for Collaborative Enterprises,(West Virginia University 1995).
No context found.
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., and Gruninger, M. (1996), "An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour." Computers in Industry, 1996, Vol. 29, pp. 123-134.
No context found.
Fox, M. S., Barbuceanu, M., Gruninger, M., 1996, "An organisation ontology for enterprise modelling: preliminary concepts for linking structure and behaviour", Computers in Industry, Vol. 29, pp. 123134.
No context found.
Fox, M.S., Barbuceanu, M., and Gruninger, M., An Organisation Ontology for Enterprise Modelling: Preliminary Concepts for Linking Structure and Behaviour, Computers in Industry, Vol. 29, pp. 123134.
No context found.
M.S. Fox, M. Barbuceanu, and M. Gruninger. An organisation ontology for enterprise modelling: Preliminary concepts for linking structure and behaviour. In Fourth Workshop on Enabling Technologies - Infrastructures for Collaborative Enterprises, West Virginia University, 1995.
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