Communicating sequential processes
Communicating sequential processes
An integrated representation for software development and discovery
An integrated representation for software development and discovery
Z: An Introduction to Formal Methods
Z: An Introduction to Formal Methods
A Calculus of Communicating Systems
A Calculus of Communicating Systems
Sweetening Ontologies with DOLCE
EKAW '02 Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management. Ontologies and the Semantic Web
UPML: A Framework for Knowledge System Reuse
IJCAI '99 Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Meteor-s web service annotation framework
Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web
Foundations for service ontologies: aligning OWL-S to dolce
Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web
Developing and managing software components in an ontology-based application server
Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IFIP/USENIX international conference on Middleware
Semantic Management of Web Services
ICWS '05 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
Semantic Management of Middleware (Semantic Web and Beyond: Computing for Human Experience)
Semantic Management of Middleware (Semantic Web and Beyond: Computing for Human Experience)
Web Systems: Semantic Management of Distributed Web Applications
IEEE Distributed Systems Online
Applied Ontology
Semantic specification and evaluation of bids in web-based markets
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
Reasoning Web
The business knowledge for customer relationship management: an ontological perspective
OBI '08 Proceedings of the first international workshop on Ontology-supported business intelligence
A semantic web environment for components
The Knowledge Engineering Review
A Core Ontology of Knowledge Acquisition
ESWC 2009 Heraklion Proceedings of the 6th European Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web: Research and Applications
F--a model of events based on the foundational ontology dolce+DnS ultralight
Proceedings of the fifth international conference on Knowledge capture
Modeling linguistic facets of multimedia content for semantic annotation
SAMT'07 Proceedings of the semantic and digital media technologies 2nd international conference on Semantic Multimedia
COMM: designing a well-founded multimedia ontology for the web
ISWC'07/ASWC'07 Proceedings of the 6th international The semantic web and 2nd Asian conference on Asian semantic web conference
LiCoRMS: towards a resource management system based on lifecycle and content information
CONTEXT'11 Proceedings of the 7th international and interdisciplinary conference on Modeling and using context
A core ontology on events for representing occurrences in the real world
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Semantic annotation of image processing tools
Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Web Intelligence, Mining and Semantics
A core reference ontology for the customer relationship domain
Applied Ontology
Applied Ontology - Is there Beauty in Ontologies?
A core reference ontology for the customer relationship domain
Applied Ontology
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Large software systems are modularized in order to improve manageability. The parts of a software system communicate in order to achieve the desired functionality. To better understand, develop, manage, and maintain the resulting complexity, this paper presents a framework of ontologies. The ontologies range from very general, foundational ones to ontologies that elucidate the specificities of particular modularization and communication paradigms. We support two specific paradigms. First, we define an ontology for software components that may be used in traditional middleware architectures, e.g., application servers. Second, we specify an ontology for Web services. Through the reuse of existing foundational ontologies and our new Core Software Ontology, our proposal offers several advantages. In particular, it avoids the typical shortcomings related approaches exhibit and it allows for the concise definition of commonalities and differences of the two paradigms.