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Enterprise interoperability : INTEROP-PGSO vision / edited by Bernard Archimède, Bruno Vallespir.

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Archimède, Bernard, editor.
Vallespir, Bruno, editor.
Series:
Wiley UBCM ebooks.
Entreprise Interoperability Set ; Volume 1
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Business enterprises--Computer networks.
Business enterprises.
Information technology--Industrial applications.
Information technology.
Management information systems.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (249 pages) : illustrations (some color).
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
London, England ; Hoboken, New Jersey : Wiley-ISTE, 2017.
Summary:
Interoperability of enterprises is one of the main requirements for economical and industrial collaborative networks. Enterprise interoperability (EI) is based on the three domains: architectures and platforms, ontologies and enterprise modeling. This book presents the EI vision of the "Grand Sud-Ouest" pole (PGSO) of the European International Virtual Laboratory for Enterprise Interoperability (INTEROP-VLab). It includes the limitations, concerns and approaches of EI, as well as a proposed framework which aims to define and delimit the concept of an EI domain. The authors present the basic concepts and principles of decisional interoperability as well as concept and techniques for interoperability measurement. The use of these previous concepts in a healthcare ecosystem and in an extended administration is also presented.
Contents:
Cover
Half-Title Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
I.1. Initializing enterprise interoperability research by EU-funded projects
I.1.1. IDEAS
I.1.2. INTEROP-NoE
I.1.3. ATHENA - IP
I.1.4. I-ESA conference
I.2. Consolidation and deployment of enterprise interoperability research: INTEROP-VLab Aisbl
I.2.1. INTEROP-VLab Aisbl
I.2.2. INTEROP-VLab GSO pole
I.3. Framework and definition of enterprise interoperability
I.4. Presentation of the book
I.4.1. Chapters
I.4.2. Interpretative framework
I.5. Bibliography
1. Framework for Enterprise Interoperability
1.1. Introduction
1.2. Enterprise interoperability concepts
1.2.1. Interoperability barriers
1.2.2. Interoperability concerns
1.2.3. Interoperability approaches
1.3. Framework for Enterprise Interoperability
1.3.1. Problem space versus solution space
1.3.2. The two basic dimensions
1.3.3. The third dimension
1.3.4. Complementary dimensions
1.4. Conclusion and prospects
1.5. Bibliography
2. Networked Companies and a Typology of Collaborations
2.1. Introduction
2.2. Various types of collaboration between companies
2.2.1. Strategic alliances
2.2.2. Integrated logistics management
2.2.3. Network enterprise
2.2.4. Virtual organizations and clusters
2.2.5. Virtual communities
2.3. Classification of the various types of collaboration and interoperability
2.3.1. Long-term strategic collaboration
2.4. Conclusion
2.5. Bibliography
3. Designing Natively Interoperable Complex Systems: An Interface Design Pattern Proposal
3.1. Introduction
3.2. Work program: context, problematic, hypothesis and expected contributions
3.3. Concepts
3.4. Interface design pattern model
3.5. Conclusion and further work
3.6. Appendix
3.7. Bibliography.
4. Software Development and Interoperability: A Metric-based Approach
4.1. Introduction
4.2. Literature review
4.2.1. Literature of software requirements' verification and validation
4.2.2. System state evolution
4.2.3. Interoperability literature review
4.2.4. The method for the validation and verification of interoperability requirements
4.2.5. Calculation of business process performance indicators from event logs
4.2.6. Event logs
4.3. Metric-based approach for software development and interoperability
4.3.1. Data collection framework for the validation and verification of interoperability requirements
4.3.2. Evaluation and improvement of available data
4.4. Application
4.4.1. Example 1
4.4.2. Example 2
4.5. Conclusion
4.6. Bibliography
5. Decisional Interoperability
5.1. Introduction
5.2. Decision-making
5.2.1. Definition
5.2.2. Decision-making in the GRAI model
5.2.3. Formal characterization of decision-making in the GRAI model
5.3. Decisional interoperability
5.3.1. Basic concepts
5.3.2. Design principles for dicisional interoperability
5.3.3. Formal characterization of decisional interoperability
5.4. Conclusion
5.5. Bibliography
6. The Interoperability Measurement
6.1. Introduction
6.2. Models for evaluation of interoperability
6.3. Interoperability measurement
6.3.1. The potentiality measurement
6.3.2. Interoperability degree measurement
6.3.3. Performance measurement
6.4. Taking it further
6.5. Conclusion and prospects
6.6. Bibliography
7. Interoperability and Supply Chain Management
7.1. Introduction
7.2. Supply chains interoperability needs
7.3. Various types of supply chain interoperability
7.4. The main logistic Information Systems to support interoperability.
7.5. Main architectures to support logistic interoperability
7.6. SaaS applications revolutionize logistic interoperability
7.7. Conclusion
7.8. Bibliography
8. Organizational Interoperability Between Public and Private Actors in an Extended Administration
8.1. Introduction
8.2. Public-private network
8.3. Inter-organizational interoperability
8.4. Management framework for extended administration
8.5. Application to the "public clothing" function
8.6. Conclusion
8.7. Acknowledgments
8.8. Bibliography
9. An Inventory of Interoperability in Healthcare Ecosystems: Characterization and Challenges
9.1. Introduction
9.2. eHealth interoperability
9.3. Levels of interoperability in eHealth ecosystems
9.3.1. Technical interoperability
9.3.2. Semantic interoperability
9.3.3. Organizational interoperability
9.4. Survey of interoperability frameworks
9.4.1. eHealth European Interoperability Framework (eHeath EIF)
9.4.2. Health Information Systems Interoperability Framework (HIS-IF)
9.4.3. eHealth Interoperability Framework (eHealth IF)
9.4.4. Personal Health Systems framework
9.5. Discussion
9.5.1. Interoperability levels
9.5.2. Interoperability concerns
9.5.3. Interoperability approaches
9.5.4. Discussion
9.6. Conclusion and future work
9.7. Bibliography
9.8. Glossary
List of Authors
Index
Other titles from iSTE in Systems and Industrial Engineering - Robotics
EULA.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9781119407928
1119407923
9781119407911
1119407915
9781119407904
1119407907
OCLC:
990750119

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