Toward Self-Integrating Software Applications for Supply Chain Management
Information Systems Frontiers
Toward Self-Integrating Software Applications for Supply Chain Management
Information Systems Frontiers
Sweetening Ontologies with DOLCE
EKAW '02 Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management. Ontologies and the Semantic Web
Ontologies for semantically interoperable systems
CIKM '03 Proceedings of the twelfth international conference on Information and knowledge management
Ontologies for corporate web applications
AI Magazine
Ontologies for supply chain simulation modeling
WSC '05 Proceedings of the 37th conference on Winter simulation
On the Systems Engineering and Management of Systems of Systems and Federations of Systems
Information-Knowledge-Systems Management
Possible Ontologies: How Reality Constrains the Development of Relevant Ontologies
IEEE Internet Computing
Enterprise integration and interoperability in manufacturing systems: Trends and issues
Computers in Industry
Towards a classification framework for interoperability of enterprise applications
International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing
OWL-P: a methodology for business process development
AOIS'05 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Agent-Oriented Information Systems III
Ontology approach for the interoperability of networked enterprises in supply chain environment
OTM'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on On the move to meaningful internet systems
Towards semantic interoperability service utilities
OTM'11 Proceedings of the 2011th Confederated international conference on On the move to meaningful internet systems
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Reference models play an important role in the knowledge management of the various complex collaboration domains (such as Supply Chain Networks). However, they often show a lack of semantic precision and, they are sometimes incomplete. In this paper, we present an approach to overcome semantic inconsistencies and incompleteness of the Supply Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) model and hence, improve its usefulness and expand the application domain. First, we describe a literal OWL specification of SCOR concepts (and related tools), built with intention to preserve the original approach in the classification of process reference model entities and hence, to enable effectiveness of usage in original contexts. Next, we demonstrate the system for its exploitation, in specific - tools for SCOR framework browsing and rapid supply chain process configuration. Then, we describe the SCOR-FULL ontology and its intended use. Finally, we elaborate the potential impact of the presented approach, to interoperability of systems in Supply Chain Networks.