Handbook of Research on E-Business Standards and Protocols: Documents, Data and Advanced Web Technologies
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Handbook of Research on E-Business Standards and Protocols: Documents, Data and Advanced Web Technologies Editors: Ejub Kajan, State University of Novi Pazar, Serbia; Frank-Dieter Dorloff, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany; Ivan Bedini, Alcatel Lucent, Bell Labs, Ireland ISBN: 978-1-4666-0146-8, © 2012, 901 pp. Table of Contents Foreword Preface Acknowledgment Preamble Efficient and Interoperable E-Business –based on Frameworks, Standards and Protocols: by Frank-Dieter Dorloff, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany Ejub Kajan, State University of Novi Pazar, Serbia Section I General Approaches to E-Business Interoperability – Standards, Data exchange, Semantics Chapter 1 The reality of using standards for electronic business document formats Tim McGrath, Document Engineering Services, Australia Chapter 2 Analysis of Interoperability of e-Business documents Ivan Magdalenić, University of Zagreb, Croatia Chapter 3 Harmonized and Reversible development framework for HLA based interoperable application Zhiying Tu, University of Bordeaux, France Gregory Zacharewicz, University of Bordeaux, France David Chen, University of Bordeaux, France Chapter 4 Concepts for Enhancing Content Quality and eAccessibility – In General and in the Field of eProcurement Christian Galinski, Infoterm, Vienna, Austria Helmut Beckmann, Heilbronn University, Germany Chapter 5 BOMOS – Management and Development Model for Open Standards Erwin Folmer, Netherlands Open in Connection, TNO, Netherlands Section II General Approaches to E-Business Interoperability – Interdisciplinary and Applications-oriented concepts Chapter 6 Interoperability Support for E-Business Applications through Standards, Services and Multi- agent Systems Rainer Unland, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany Chapter 7 Ontologies for Guaranteeing the Interoperability in e-Business – a business economics point of view – Stephan Zelewski, University of Dusiburg-Essen, Germany Adina Silvia Bruns, University of Dusiburg-Essen, Germany Martin Kowalski, University of Dusiburg-Essen, Germany Chapter 8 How Semantic Web technologies can support the mediation between supply and demand in the ICT market: the case of Customer Relationships Management Anna Maria Goy, University of Torino, Italy Diego Margo, University of Torino, Italy Chapter 9 Customer Decision Making in Web Services Zhaohao Sun, University of Ballarat, Australia Ping Zhang, CSIRO, Melbourne Australia Dong Dong, Hebei Normal University, China Chapter 10 The Metaphorical Foundation of Interoperability Artifacts: The Case of Public Services Veit Jahns, University of Dusiburg-Essen, Germany Chapter 11 Standards for Achieving Interoperability of eGovernment in Europe Marc Wilhelm Küster, University of Applied Sciences Worms, Germany Section III Standards for Security and Trust in E-Business Chapter 12 Fundamental Building Blocks for Security Interoperability in e-Business Muhammad Asim, Philips Electronics, Netherlands Milan Petković, Philips Electronics, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands Chapter 13 Automatic Transformation of Generic, Validated Business Process Security Models to WS- SecurityPolicy Descriptions Sven Feja, Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, Germany Sven August, Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, Germany Andreas Speck, Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, Germany Meiko Jensen, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Jörg Schwenk, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Chapter 14 Trust Management and User’s Trust Perception in e-Business Elisa Costante, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands Milan Petković, Philips Electronics, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands Jerry den Hartog, TU/e Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands Section IV Dealing with E-Business Data – Classification, Exchange, Harmonization Chapter 15 Privacy-Conscious Data Mashup: Concepts, Challenges and Directions Mahmoud Barhamgi, Claude Bernard Lyon1 University Villeurbanne, France Chirine Ghedira, Claude Bernard Lyon1 University Villeurbanne, France Salah-Eddine Tbahriti, Claude Bernard Lyon1 University Villeurbanne, France Michael Mrissa, Claude Bernard Lyon1 University Villeurbanne, France Djamal Benslimane, Claude Bernard Lyon1 University Villeurbanne, France Brahim Medjahed, University of Michigan-Dearborn, USA Chapter 16 Co-ordination and specialisation of semantics in a B2B relation Fred van Blommenstein, University of Groningen, Netherlands Chapter 17 An examination of standardised product identification and business benefit Douglas. S. Hill, University of Southampton, UK Chapter 18 Towards Crowd-Driven Business Processes Maja Vuković, IBM T.J. Watson Research, U.S.A Claudio Bartolini, HP Labs, U.S.A Chapter 19 Unified Data Model for Large-Scale Multi-Schema Integration (ULMI) Michael Dietrich, SAP, Germany Jens Lemcke, SAP, Germany Chapter 20 Flexible classification standards for product data exchange Wolfgang Wilkes, Fernuniversität Hagen, Germany Peter J. A. Reusch, Fachhochschule Dortmund, Germany Laura Esmeralda Garcia Moreno, Fachhochschule Dortmund, Germany Section V Business Process Modeling, Validation and Monitoring Chapter 21 Semantic Monitoring of Service-Oriented Business Processes Roman Vaculin, IBM T.J. Watson Research, U.S.A Chapter 22 Supporting Semantic Verification of Process Models Michael Fellmann, University of Osnabrueck, Germany Oliver Thomas, University of Osnabrueck, Germany Frank Hogrebe, University of Hamburg, Germany Chapter 23 Tool based Integration of Requirements Modeling and Validation into Business Process Modeling Sven Feja, Christian Аlbrechts University of Kiel, Germany Sören Witt, Christian Аlbrechts University of Kiel, Germany Andreas Speck, Christian Аlbrechts University of Kiel, Germany Section VI Research on Service Quality and Service-Oriented E-Business Architectures Chapter 24 Service Quality: Status and Research Directions Sue Conger, University of Dallas, USA, Rhodes University, South Africa Chapter 25 An event-based middleware for the management of choreographed services Liliana Ardissono, University of Torino, Italy Roberto Furnari, University of Torino, Italy Giovanna Petrone, University of Torino , Italy Marino Segnan, University of Torino, Italy Chapter 26 Collaboration-based Model-Driven Approach for Business Service Composition Surya Bahadur Kathayat, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Hien Le, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Rolv Bræk, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Chapter 27 Enterprise Service Bus for Building Integrated Enterprises M. Antonia Martínez-Carreras, University of Murcia, Spain Francisco J. García-Jiménez, University of Murcia, Spain Antonio F. Gómez-Skarmeta, University of Murcia, Spain Chapter 28 Measuring Quality of Electronic Services: Moving from Business-to-Consumer into Business-to- Business marketplace Mahmoud Amer, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany Jorge Marx Gómez, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany Section VII Semantically-enabled E-Business Architectures Chapter 29 Semantically Enriched e-Business Standards Development: The Case of ebXML Business Process Specification Schema Bahareh Rahmanzadeh Heravi, Brunel University, UK Mark Lycett, Brunel University, UK Chapter 30 Semantic Alignment of E-Business Standards and Legacy Models Janina Fengel, University of Applied Sciences, Darmstadt, Germany Chapter 31 Towards Supporting Interoperability in e-Invoicing based on Semantic Web Technologies José Manuel Gómez-Pérez, Intelligent Software Components (iSOCO) S.A., Spain Víctor Méndez, Intelligent Software Components (iSOCO) S.A., Spain Section VIII Applications fields and experiences Chapter 32 An Ontological Business Process Modeling Approach for Public Administration: The Case of Human Resources Management Ioannis Savvas, Agricultural University of Athens, Greece Nick Bassiliades, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Kalliopi Kravari, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Georgios Meditskos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Chapter 33 Towards a Healthcare Interoperability Framework based on Medical Business Artifacts , Social Networks, and Communities of Healthcare Professionals Zakaria Maamar, Zayed University, Dubai, UAE Youcef Baghdadi, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman Chapter 34 Emerging Standards and Protocols for Governance, Risk and Compliance Management Marcus Spies, LMU University of Munich, Germany Said Tabet, EMC, U.S.A Chapter 35 Governmental Service Transformation through Cost Scenarios Simulation: The eGOVSIM Model Yannis Charalabidis, University of the Aegean, Greece Chapter 36 SIGA3D: Semantic Combination of IFC and GIS to support Urban Facilities Management Clément Mignard, Active3D,Dijon, France Christophe Nicolle, University of Bourgogne, France Chapter 37 Challenges for adoption of e-Procurement: An SME perspective Kelly Liljemo, University of Agder, Norway Andreas Prinz, University of Agder, Norway Compilation of references About the Contributors Index .