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2006 | Buch

Handbook on Architectures of Information Systems

herausgegeben von: Assoc. Professor Dr. Peter Bernus, Professor Dr. Kai Mertins, Professor Dr. Günter Schmidt

Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Buchreihe : International Handbooks on Information Systems

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Über dieses Buch

This book is the first volume of a running series under the title Inter- tional Handbooks on Information Systems. The series is edited by Peter Bernus, Jacek Blazewicz, Günter Schmidt and Mike Shaw. One objective is to give state of the art surveys on selected topics of information systems theory and applications. To this end, a distinguished international group of academics and practitioners are invited to provide a reference source not only for problem solvers in business, industry, and government but also for professional researchers and graduate students. It seemed appropriate to start the series with a volume covering some basic aspects about information systems. The focus of the first volume is therefore architectures. It was decided to have a balanced number of c- tributions from academia and practitioners. The structure of the material follows a differentiation betweeen modelling languages, tools and meth- ologies. These are collected into separate parts, allowing the reader of the handbook a better comparison of the contributions. Information systems are a major component of the entire enterprise and the reader will notice that many contributions could just as easily have been included in another volume of the series which is on enterprise in- gration. Conversely, some traditionally information systems topics, as - ganisational analysis and strategic change management methods, will be treated in more depth in the Handbook on Enterprise Integration. The two volumes will complement each other.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Architectures of Information Systems

Architectures of Information Systems
Peter Bernus, Günter Schmidt

Techniques and Languages for the Description of Information Systems

Properties of Information Modeling Techniques for Information Systems Engineering
John Mylopoulos, Alex Borgida
Express
Reiner Anderl, Harald John, Christian Pütter
Object-Role Modeling (ORM/NIAM)
Terry Halpin
Database Language SQL
Jim Melton
Petri Nets
Jean-Marie Proth
State Transition Diagrams
Jules Desharnais, Marc Frappier, Ali Mili
The Process Interchange Format
Jintae Lee, Michael Gruninger, Yan Jin, Thomas Malone, Austin Tate, Gregg Yost
Process Language GPN
Günter Schmidt, Oliver Braun
The IDEF Family of Languages
Christopher Menzel, Richard J. Mayer
The CIMOSA Languages
François Vernadat
ConceptBase: Managing Conceptual Models about Information Systems
Manfred A. Jeusfeld, Matthias Jarke, Hans W. Nissen, Martin Staudt
Conceptual Graphs
John F. Sowa
GRAI GridDecisional Modelling
Guy Doumeingts, Bruno Vallespir, David Chen
Modeling of Business Systems Using SOM
Otto K. Ferstl, Elmar J. Sinz
Workflow and Service Composition Languages
Mathias Weske, Gottfried Vossen, Frank Puhlmann
XML — The Extensible Markup Language and its Use in the Field of EDI

This contribution introduced the reader to fundamental XML technologies such as XML and DTDs. In many application scenarios XML plays a major role when designing modern information systems. XML is supported by all major software vendors and it can be used with a variety of languages on almost every computer platform, which further facilitates XML’s suitability for many different applications. One of those a applications is the field of EDI where, among other things, XML has been adopted to structure business documents such as invoices and purchase orders. Nevertheless, XML is no magic bullet because the problem of different coexisting formats is still unsolved. Similar to traditional EDI, with XML there is the need for conversions and transformations between different formats. This issue was a main focus of this contribution. We showed what problems might occur when XML business documents have to be transformed into other formats and how to solve these problems with XSLT. At the end we introduced the <x:act> Web service as a means for carrying out such conversions in a platform- and language-neutral manner.

Erik Wüstner, Peter Buxmann, Oliver Braun
Modeling Information-Systems with UML Unified Modeling Language
Fritz Letters

Software Engineering Methods for Information System Construction

Information Engineering Methodology
Clive Finkelstein
Object-Oriented Software Engineering Methods
Brian Henderson-Sellers
Euromethod Contract Management
Alfred Helmerich

Tools for Analysis and Design

An Integrated Enterprise Modeling Environment
Florence Tissot, Wes Crump
WorkParty - Business Processes and Workflow Management
Walter Rupietta
Business Process Reengineering with PROPLAN®
Günther Schuh, Thomas Siepmann, Volker Levering
ARIS — Architecture of Integrated Information Systems
August-Wilhelm Scheer, Kristof Schneider
Tools for Analysis and Simulation: BONAPART
Herrmann Krallmann, K. Wiener, Gay Wood
MO2GO: User Oriented Enterprise Models for Organisational and IT Solutions
Kai Mertins, Frank-Walter Jaekel

Reference Models

IBM Insurance Application Architecture (IAA) — An overview of the Insurance Business Architecture
Jürgen Huschens, Marilies Rumpold-Preining
Fraunhofer Simulation Reference Models
Markus Rabe, Kai Mertins
Configuring Business Application Systems
Stefan Meinhardt, Karl Popp
The SIZ Banking Data Model
Hans-Bernd Kittlaus, Daniela Krahl
ODP and OMA Reference Models
Andy Bond, Keith Duddy, Kerry Raymond

Selected Topics in Integrating Infrastructures

Architectural Requirements of Commercial Products
Ted Goranson
Integration Infrastructures for Agile Manufacturing Systems
Richard H. Weston, Ian A. Coutts, Paul E. Clements
Distributed Processing: DCE, CORBA, and Java
Andy Bond, Keith Duddy, Kerry Raymond
Higher Level Integration by Multi-Agent Architectures
Mihai Barbuceanu, Rune Teigen
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Handbook on Architectures of Information Systems
herausgegeben von
Assoc. Professor Dr. Peter Bernus
Professor Dr. Kai Mertins
Professor Dr. Günter Schmidt
Copyright-Jahr
2006
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-540-26661-7
Print ISBN
978-3-540-25472-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/b137905