Enterprise Interoperability VII (eBook)
XIV, 344 Seiten
Springer International Publishing (Verlag)
978-3-319-30957-6 (ISBN)
A concise reference to the state of the art in systems interoperability, Enterprise Interoperability VII will be of great value to engineers and computer scientists working in manufacturing and other process industries and to software engineers and electronic and manufacturing engineers working in the academic environment. Furthermore, it shows how knowledge of the meaning within information and the use to which it will be put have to be held in common between enterprises for consistent and efficient inter-enterprise networks.
Over 30 papers, ranging from academic research through case studies to industrial and administrative experience of interoperability show how, in a scenario of globalised markets, where the capacity to cooperate with other organizations efficiently is essential in order to remain economically, socially and environmentally cost-effective, the most innovative digitized and networked enterprises ensure that their systems and applications are able to interoperate across heterogeneous collaborative networks of independent organizations. This goal of interoperability is essential, not only from the perspective of the individual enterprise but also in the business structures that are now emerging, such as complex collaborating networks of suppliers and customers, virtual enterprises, interconnected organisations or extended enterprises, as well as in mergers and acquisitions. Establishing efficient and relevant collaborative situations requires the management of interoperability from a dynamic point of view: a relevant and efficient collaboration of organizations may require adaptation to remain in line with changing objectives, evolving resources, unexpected events, etc. Many of the papers contained in this, the eighth volume of Proceedings of the I-ESA Conferences have examples and illustrations calculated to deepen understanding and generate new ideas.
The I-ESA'16 Conference from which this book is drawn was organized by the Escola de Engenharia da Universidade do Minho, on behalf of the European Virtual Laboratory for Enterprise Interoperability (INTEROP-VLab) and Interop VLab Portuguese Pole.Prof. Dr.-Ing. Kai Mertins was born 1947 in the Federal Republic of Germany. After studies of Control Theory in Hamburg and of Economy together with Production Technology at the Technical University of Berlin he was a member of the scientific staff of the University Institute for Machine Tool and Manufacturing Technology (IWF). Since 1983 he was head of the department 'Production Control and Manufacturing Systems' at the Fraunhofer-Institute for Production Systems and Design Technology (IPK), where he is since 1988 Director for Planning Technology. Since 1998 he is Professor for Production Management at the Technical University of Berlin, Germany. He has more than 20 years experience in design, planning, simulation and control of flexible manufacturing systems, manufacturing control systems, shop floor control systems, computer integrated manufacturing, business reengineering and enterprise modelling as well as Intellectual Capital Statement. He was General Project manager in several international industrial projects and gave lectures and seminars at the Technical University Berlin and several other universities.
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Kai Mertins was born 1947 in the Federal Republic of Germany. After studies of Control Theory in Hamburg and of Economy together with Production Technology at the Technical University of Berlin he was a member of the scientific staff of the University Institute for Machine Tool and Manufacturing Technology (IWF). Since 1983 he was head of the department "Production Control and Manufacturing Systems" at the Fraunhofer-Institute for Production Systems and Design Technology (IPK), where he is since 1988 Director for Planning Technology. Since 1998 he is Professor for Production Management at the Technical University of Berlin, Germany. He has more than 20 years experience in design, planning, simulation and control of flexible manufacturing systems, manufacturing control systems, shop floor control systems, computer integrated manufacturing, business reengineering and enterprise modelling as well as Intellectual Capital Statement. He was General Project manager in several international industrial projects and gave lectures and seminars at the Technical University Berlin and several other universities.
Preface 6
Acknowledgements 9
Contents 10
Introduction 14
1 An Interoperable Cloud Environment of Manufacturing Control System 15
Abstract 15
1 Introduction 15
2 Cloud Manufacturing Framework 17
2.1 Architecture of Clone-Based Model 19
2.2 Operation Processing Plan Generation 20
3 Prototype of the System 22
3.1 Architecture of the System 22
4 Conclusions 24
References 24
2 A New Framework for Strategic Risk Analysis in a Global Pump Manufacturing Network 25
Abstract 25
1 Introduction 25
2 Literature Review 26
3 Strategic Risk Evaluation in Global Production Networks 27
4 Alternative Configurations for the GPN 28
4.1 Regions 28
4.2 Interdependencies 30
5 Risk Scenarios 30
5.1 External Risks 30
5.2 Internal Risks 31
6 Analysis of Results 31
6.1 Nodes Inoperability 32
6.2 Expected Loss of Risk 32
7 Conclusions 33
Acknowledgments 34
Appendix: Fuzzy Dynamic Inoperability Input Output Model 34
References 34
3 Cloud and Services Testing Applied in Manufacturing 36
Abstract 36
1 Introduction 37
2 Testing Methodologies and Components 39
2.1 Unit Testing 39
2.2 API Testing 40
2.3 Integration Testing 40
2.4 Acceptance Testing 42
3 Testing Tools 43
3.1 Quality Criteria 43
3.2 Functional Criteria 43
3.3 Selecting Testing Tools 44
4 Conclusions and Future Work 48
Acknowledgments 48
References 49
4 A Self Sustainable Approach for IoT Services Provisioning 50
Abstract 50
1 Introduction 50
2 IoT Services Architecture 52
2.1 IoT-Based Architecture 52
2.1.1 IoT-A 52
2.1.2 FIWARE Approach 53
2.2 IoT Layered Architecture for Service Virtualization 54
3 Self-sustainability in IoT 55
3.1 Self-organization in IoT Networks 55
3.2 Service Aggregation for Location 56
3.3 Intelligent Service Assessment 57
4 C2NET Use Case 58
5 Conclusions and Future Work 59
Acknowledgments 60
References 60
Modelling the Enterprise Interoperability 62
5 Requirement Pattern Elicitation Approach of Massive Customers in Domain Oriented Service Requirement Engineering 63
Abstract 63
1 Introduction 64
2 Related Works 65
2.1 Service Modeling Works 65
2.2 Frequent Pattern Elicitation Work 66
3 Motivation and Problem Formulation 67
3.1 Motivation 67
3.2 Problem Formulation 69
4 Requirement Pattern Elicitation Approach 71
4.1 Frequency Analysis of Individual Customer Activities 71
4.2 Frequency Analysis of Frequent Individual Customer Activity Set in Group 74
4.3 Association Detection Between Customer Activity Sets 77
4.4 Business Process Generation 78
4.5 Association Detection Between Business Processes 79
4.6 Requirement Pattern Generation 80
5 Experiment Result Analysis 81
5.1 Predefined Threshold Value Issue 81
5.2 Requirement Activity Set List Size Versus Execution Time 82
5.3 Overall Analysis Versus Extreme Situation 83
6 Conclusions and Future Work 83
References 84
6 Semantic Data Integration Approach for the Vision of a Digital Factory 86
Abstract 86
1 Introduction 86
2 Use Cases 88
3 Problem Description 89
4 Approach 92
5 Conclusions and Outlook 94
Acknowledgments 95
References 95
7 Negotiation Coordination Model for Supporting Enterprise Interoperability 96
Abstract 96
1 Introduction 97
2 Related Work 97
3 Negotiation System with MAS 98
4 Coordination Rules 98
4.1 Fundamental Concepts 98
4.2 Constraints Definition Model 99
5 Coordination Pattern 100
5.1 Coordination in a Closed Environment 102
5.1.1 Negotiation as a Block 102
6 Application to the Manufacturing Segment 104
7 Conclusions and Future Work 105
Acknowledgments 105
References 105
Semantics for Enterprise Interoperability 107
8 The Systems Development Life Cycle to Facilitate Progression Towards Semantic and Organizational Interoperability for Healthcare System 108
Abstract 108
1 Introduction 108
2 The Challenges of Interoperability 109
3 Semantic Interoperability in Healthcare 110
3.1 Life Cycle of Semantic Web Services and Semantic Technology 111
4 Organizational Interoperability in Healthcare 112
4.1 Life Cycle of Business Processes Interoperability in Healthcare 113
5 The Introduction of New Procedure in the Healthcare System Through Life Cycle of Semantic and Organizational Interoperability 115
6 Conclusions and Future Work 116
References 117
9 Performance Oriented Decision Making to Guide Web Service Lifecycle 119
Abstract 119
1 Introduction 119
2 Related Works 121
2.1 Performance Based Web Services Techniques 121
2.2 Ontology Based QoS Monitoring Techniques 122
2.3 Analysis 122
3 Proposed Approach 123
3.1 Service Network Monitoring Ontology (SNMOnt) 123
3.2 Decision Support 126
4 Conclusion 127
References 127
10 Profiling Based on Music and Physiological State 129
Abstract 129
1 Introduction 130
2 Background Observation 130
2.1 Physiological Measurements 130
2.1.1 The Processing of One Physiological Measurement 131
2.1.2 Existing Solutions 131
2.2 Emotions 132
2.2.1 How to Represent Emotions 132
2.2.2 Emotional Deduction 134
3 Framework 134
3.1 System Architecture 136
3.2 Music Deduction Using an Ontology 137
3.2.1 Ontology Model 137
4 Use Cases 138
5 Concluding Remarks and Future Work 140
Acknowledgments 140
References 140
Architectures and Frameworks for Interoperability 142
11 Automated Process Model Generation for Internet of Things Oriented Enterprise Systems 143
Abstract 143
1 Introduction 143
2 Process Modelling in the Context of Future Enterprise Systems 144
3 The Development of an Automated Process Model Generation Framework 145
4 Automated Process Model Generation Framework Implementation 147
4.1 Semantic Lifting of Sensor Observation 147
4.2 Action Detection Using CONSTRUCT SPARQL Queries 148
4.3 Process Case Identification Using CONSTRUCT SPARQL Queries 148
4.4 Process Model Extraction 149
4.4.1 Process Model Discovery 149
4.4.2 Decision Point Analysis 150
4.4.3 BPMN2 Conversion 151
4.4.4 Base Solution Analysis 151
5 Conclusions and Further Work 151
References 152
12 Use of Big Data for Continuous Interoperability in Crisis Management 154
Abstract 154
1 Introduction 155
2 Towards a Better Interoperability in Crisis Management 155
2.1 Two Elements of Language Specific to Crisis Management 155
2.2 Characteristics and Example of a French Crisis Response Management 156
2.3 The Challenges of a Continuous Communication and Coordination in Crisis Response Management 158
2.3.1 The Two Interoperability Approaches Relevant to a Crisis Response 158
2.3.2 The Role of Big Data in Supporting Coordination During a Crisis Response 159
3 Supporting Interoperability During the Crisis Response 160
3.1 The Three Steps of the Proposed Solution 161
3.1.1 First Step: Defining at Least One Collaborative Process on the Basis of the Most Reliable Situation Model Possible 161
3.1.2 Second Step: Implementing the Chosen Collaborative Process 162
3.1.3 Third Step: Maintaining the Validity of the Implemented Process Through Run-Time Adaptations 162
3.2 The Architecture Supporting the Proposed Solution 162
4 Conclusion and Future Work 164
References 164
13 Weaving Trending, Costing and Recommendations Using Big Data Analytic: An Enterprise Capability Evaluator 166
Abstract 166
1 Introduction 166
2 Related Work 168
3 Problem Statement 169
4 Proposed Approach 170
5 Case Study 172
6 Conclusions 174
References 175
14 The Industry Cockpit Approach: A Framework for Flexible Real-Time Production Monitoring 177
Abstract 177
1 Introduction 177
2 The Industry Cockpit 179
2.1 Challenge 179
2.2 Objective 179
2.3 Approach 180
2.4 Requirements 181
3 Solution Concept for the Industry Cockpit 182
4 Use Case Implementation 184
5 Conclusion 185
Acknowledgments 186
References 186
Services for the Enterprise Interoperability 187
15 iFloW: An Integrated Logistics Software System for Inbound Supply Chain Traceability 188
Abstract 188
1 Introduction 189
2 Related Work 190
3 The iFloW Project 191
3.1 Problem Statement 191
3.2 The System Architecture 192
4 Current Results 194
5 Conclusions 196
Acknowledgments 197
References 197
16 Qualitative Evaluation of Manufacturing Software Units Interoperability Using ISO 25000 Quality Model 199
Abstract 199
1 Introduction 200
2 The Interoperability of Manufacturing Applications: Approach as per ISO 16100 Standard 201
3 Adaptation of ISO 25000 Quality Model for Interoperability Validation of MSUs 203
4 Classification of Quality Evaluation Metrics 206
5 Prototyping Issues 207
6 Conclusion and Perspectives 208
References 209
17 Process Modelling Approach for the Liquid-Sensing Enterprise 210
Abstract 210
1 Introduction 211
1.1 Osmosis Processes Concept 212
2 General Approach Model and Instantiate the OSMOSIS LSE Processes 213
3 LSE Modelling Environment 215
3.1 OBM-OTIM Process Transformation 215
3.1.1 Osmosis Process Modelling as Collaboration Diagrams 217
3.1.2 Osmosis Processes and Worlds 217
4 OSMOSE Use Case Example 217
4.1 OSMOSE Business Model 218
4.2 OSMOSE Technological Independent Model 218
4.3 OSMOSE Technological Specific Model 220
5 Conclusions 220
Acknowledgments 221
References 221
Ontologies and Concepts for Enterprise Interoperability 223
18 A MetaMeta Level Formal Manufacturing Ontology for Meta Level Production Methods 224
Abstract 224
1 Introduction 225
2 Need to Access and Reason Over Manufacturing MLK 226
3 Developing MetaMeta Level Production Method Ontology 227
4 Common Logic Based Formalization of the Model 229
5 Experimental Verification 231
6 Conclusions 232
Acknowledgments 233
References 233
19 Towards an Interoperable Decision Support Platform for Eco-labeling Process 235
Abstract 235
1 Introduction 235
2 State of Art 236
2.1 Eco-Label and EU Eco-Label 236
2.2 Knowledge-Based Decision Support and Modular Ontology 238
3 An Interoperable Decision Support Approach 239
4 The Knowledge Base in Modular Ontology 241
5 Conclusion 243
References 244
20 Framework of Design Principles and Standards for Enterprise Interoperability Service Utilities 245
Abstract 245
1 Research Context and Scope of the Paper 245
1.1 The Interoperability Service Utility (ISU) Concept 245
1.2 Research Challenge 246
2 Methodology 247
3 Design Principles and Standards 248
3.1 Review of EU Directives 248
3.2 Review of Existing ISU Applications 249
4 Analysis—Classification 252
5 Findings: Towards a Framework of Design Principles and Standards 254
6 Proof-of-Concept: The PLUG-IN Platform 254
7 Conclusions—Future Work 255
Acknowledgements 255
References 255
Industrial Implementation of Enterprise Interoperability 257
21 The Use of Serious Games in Requirements Engineering 258
Abstract 258
1 Introduction 258
2 Serious Games and Requirements Engineering 259
3 Storylines of the OSMOSE Serious Games 261
3.1 “EPC” Camshaft Game 262
3.2 “AW” Flight Training Game 264
4 OSMOSE Serious Games Workshop 266
5 Conclusions and Future Work 268
Acknowledgments 268
References 268
22 Knowledge-Based System to Enhance Coordination of Hospital Practitioners: A Case Study 270
Abstract 270
1 Introduction 270
2 Analysis of the Appointment-Making Process 271
3 Constraints Satisfaction Problem 273
4 Conclusion and Future Work 276
Acknowledgments 276
References 276
23 Towards a Flexible Gamification Model for an Interoperable E-learning Business Process Simulation Platform 277
Abstract 277
1 Introduction 277
2 Overall E-learning Simulation Architecture 279
3 Gamification Challenges for an Interoperable E-learning Simulation Platform 280
3.1 Gamification 280
3.2 Gamification Mechanics for the E-learning BP Simulation Platform 281
4 Applications 282
5 Conclusion 285
Acknowledgments 285
References 285
Collaborative Supply Networks Interoperability 286
24 Towards a Methodology to Support the Strategies Alignment Process in Collaborative Networks 287
Abstract 287
1 Introduction 287
2 Problem Description 288
3 Strategies Alignment Methodology (SA-Met) 289
4 Conclusions 296
Acknowledgments 296
References 296
25 Meta-Modeling of Collaborative Supply Chain 298
Abstract 298
1 Introduction 298
2 Bibliography 299
2.1 The Collaboration Meta-Ontology 299
2.2 Analysis of Existing Literature 300
3 Proposal 303
3.1 Mapping of Concepts 303
3.2 Description of the Supply Chain Layer 306
3.2.1 The Context System 306
3.2.2 The Objective System 308
3.2.3 The Partner System 309
4 Conclusion and Perspectives 309
Acknowledgments 310
References 310
26 Seamless Interrelation Between Business Strategies and Tactical Planning 312
Abstract 312
1 Introduction and Motivation 312
2 Related Approaches and Foundations 314
2.1 Strategic Decisions and Business Models 314
2.2 Tactical Model and Enterprise Model 315
2.3 Objectives and Indicators 316
3 The Approach to Strategic/Tactical Modelling 316
4 Conclusion 320
Acknowledgments 321
References 321
27 A Competition Model for the Offer: An Experiment of Management Simulation 323
Abstract 323
1 Introduction 323
2 The Decisions Simulator 324
3 The Simulation Reference Model 325
4 Methodology 326
4.1 Algorithmic Construction of the Competition Model 326
5 The Case Study (The Simulation) 326
6 Analysis of the Results 328
7 Conclusions and Considerations 330
References 331
Author Index 332
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 18.10.2016 |
---|---|
Reihe/Serie | Proceedings of the I-ESA Conferences | Proceedings of the I-ESA Conferences |
Zusatzinfo | XIV, 344 p. 104 illus., 87 illus. in color. |
Verlagsort | Cham |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik ► Software Entwicklung |
Technik ► Nachrichtentechnik | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Wirtschaftsinformatik | |
Schlagworte | conference proceedings • Engineering Economics • enterprise applications • Enterprise Interoperability • enterprise modelling • Enterprise Semantics • Systems Compatibility |
ISBN-10 | 3-319-30957-9 / 3319309579 |
ISBN-13 | 978-3-319-30957-6 / 9783319309576 |
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