Distributed and Parallel Databases
Workflow mining: a survey of issues and approaches
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualizations
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Visual Analytics: Visual data mining and analysis of software repositories
Computers and Graphics
Understanding Mashup Development
IEEE Internet Computing
Online Interaction Analysis Framework for Ad-Hoc Collaborative Processes in SOA-Based Environments
Transactions on Petri Nets and Other Models of Concurrency II
Innovation in the Programmable Web: Characterizing the Mashup Ecosystem
Service-Oriented Computing --- ICSOC 2008 Workshops
On Analyzing Evolutionary Changes of Web Services
Service-Oriented Computing --- ICSOC 2008 Workshops
Providing Flexible Process Support to Project-Centered Learning
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
A Service-Oriented Approach to Document-Centric Situational Collaboration Processes
WETICE '09 Proceedings of the 2009 18th IEEE International Workshops on Enabling Technologies: Infrastructures for Collaborative Enterprises
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Individuals collaborate with each other in groups in order to solve complex tasks or to jointly develop new solutions. The Web offers them a huge amount of data, information and services to be used as input to their collaboration. In our research we examine such creative and emergent open collaboration processes and their relationship to documents as a communication and collaboration vehicle. Our goal is to better support coordination and integration in such collaborations. From a technological perspective, we aim to support open collaborations by putting a service-oriented document model and middleware in the center of a collaboration. As a first step, we provide a concrete design of a document collaboration system representing documents as rule-based mashups of RESTful services provided by humans, enterprise systems or the Web. As a second step, we aim to analyze communication of resources in open collaboration processes. We strive to use this analysis data in order to a) provide end-users of our collaboration system with a visual method in order to help them understanding the evolution of their document collaboration ecosystem and processes and to b) allow detecting potential inconsistencies in rule-based process definitions which can be caused by the open ecosystem of resources. In this paper we give a short overview of the current state of our research and outline future research directions.