An evaluation of Web services in the design of a B2B application
ACSC '04 Proceedings of the 27th Australasian conference on Computer science - Volume 26
Flexible value structures in banking
Communications of the ACM - New architectures for financial services
ECBS '05 Proceedings of the 12th IEEE International Conference and Workshops on Engineering of Computer-Based Systems
An evaluation and selection framework for interoperability standards
Information and Software Technology
Interoperability for electronic governance
Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Theory and practice of electronic governance
Finance Sector: Requirements for High Assurance within Spatial SOA Based Grid Infrastructures
HASE '07 Proceedings of the 10th IEEE High Assurance Systems Engineering Symposium
Why Standards Are Not Enough to Guarantee End-to-End Interoperability
ICCBSS '08 Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Composition-Based Software Systems (ICCBSS 2008)
Architectures for enterprise integration and interoperability: Past, present and future
Computers in Industry
Semantic interoperability in eGovernment initiatives
Computer Standards & Interfaces
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The growing trends towards integrating legacy applications with new systems in a network-centric environment has introduced yet another level of complexity beyond those we witnessed in development of large monolithic systems. In this context, most research challenges focus on interoperability within the same domain. However, provision of cross-domain interoperability among collaborating domains is a new challenge that needs more attention from the research community. Such interoperability requires data and service extraction to obtain common subsets of information and services in collaborating domains, e.g., healthcare and insurance. The first step in achieving such a large interoperability is to follow similar development processes for collaborating domains, which provides homogeneity in their architectures. The second step would be to provide intra-domain and inter-domain semantic interoperability through proprietary and shared ontology systems. In this paper, we address the above challenges through description of a framework that is based on core information standards and terminology systems and employs a guideline to achieve service interoperability among systems of the collaborating domains. A real-world case study of cross-domain interoperability among two domains healthcare and insurance is presented.