Understanding computers and cognition
Understanding computers and cognition
ICATPN '97 Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Application and Theory of Petri Nets
Action-oriented conceptual modelling
European Journal of Information Systems
Methodological support for service-oriented design with ISDL
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Service oriented computing
The deep structure of business processes
Communications of the ACM - Two decades of the language-action perspective
A language-mapping approach to action-oriented development of information systems
European Journal of Information Systems - Special issue: Action in language, organisations and information systems
Service Interaction Modeling: Bridging Global and Local Views
EDOC '06 Proceedings of the 10th IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference
A theoretical investigation of the emerging standards for web services
Information Systems Frontiers
Service-oriented design and development methodology
International Journal of Web Engineering and Technology
A language/action perspective on the design of cooperative work
Human-Computer Interaction
Interaction modeling using BPMN
BPM'07 Proceedings of the 2007 international conference on Business process management
Let's dance: a language for service behavior modeling
ODBASE'06/OTM'06 Proceedings of the 2006 Confederated international conference on On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems: CoopIS, DOA, GADA, and ODBASE - Volume Part I
Beyond Ontology in Information Systems
QI '09 Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Quantum Interaction
Interaction-centric modeling of process choreographies
Information Systems
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The modelling of B2B scenarios focuses on conversations between key partners to establish a common business context for their collaboration. With the prevalence of Web services, attention has turned to service choreographies as a means of message exchange ordering between collaborating participants, from a global (or shared) understanding. As such, the message ordering in a choreography model can then be used to determine the message ordering behaviour of each participant's process. In this paper, we extend the suitability of choreography modelling for the early phase of analysis, where the participants and the nature of interactions develops under the flux of requirements acquisition. In particular, we develop a structural view of interactions and stepwise refinement, leading to behavioural considerations, reminiscent of classical techniques. In addition, we introduce contextualisation of intent behind message exchanges in the form of speech acts. This, we show, can be used to automatically detect conflicts in conversations, in the business sense, namely negotiation or provision breakdowns - prior to technical implementations of choreographies. Model abstraction and refinement is based on Semantic Object Model (SOM), and a mapping to the Business Process Modelling Notation (BPMN) is shown.