Objects, components, and frameworks with UML: the catalysis approach
Objects, components, and frameworks with UML: the catalysis approach
The object constraint language: precise modeling with UML
The object constraint language: precise modeling with UML
A framework for information systems architecture
IBM Systems Journal
Engineering Modelling Languages: A Precise Meta-Modelling Approach
FASE '02 Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Fundamental Approaches to Software Engineering
Viewpoints for Requirements Elicitation: A Practical Approach
ICRE '98 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Putting Requirements Engineering to Practice
Viewpoint Oriented Software Development: Methods and Viewpoints in Requirements Engineering
Algebraic Methods II: Theory, Tools and Applications [papers from a workshop in Mierlo, The Netherlands, September 1989]
Goal-Based Requirements Analysis
ICRE '96 Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Requirements Engineering (ICRE '96)
Consistent Enterprise Software System Architecture for the CIO -- A Utility-Cost Based Approach
HICSS '04 Proceedings of the Proceedings of the 37th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'04) - Track 8 - Volume 8
Analysis and Application Scenarios of Enterprise Architecture: An Exploratory Study
EDOCW '06 Proceedings of the 10th IEEE on International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference Workshops
Enterprise architecture analysis with extended influence diagrams
Information Systems Frontiers
A Contingency Approach to Enterprise Architecture Method Engineering
Service-Oriented Computing --- ICSOC 2008 Workshops
The Anatomy of the ArchiMate Language
International Journal of Information System Modeling and Design
Proceedings of the 6th India Software Engineering Conference
Assessing composition in modeling approaches
Proceedings of the CMA 2012 Workshop
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This paper proposes LEAP, a simple framework for Enterprise Architecture (EA) that views an organization as an engine that executes in terms of hierarchically decomposed communicating components. The approach allows all aspects of the architecture to be precisely defined using standard modelling notations. Given that the approach is simple and precisely defined it can form the basis for a wide range of EA analysis techniques including simulation, compliance and consistency checking. The paper defines the LEAP framework and shows that it can be used to represent the key features of ArchiMate whilst containing fewer orthogonal concepts. We also show that the precision of LEAP, achieved through the use of OCL, can be used to verify both the claims made for inter-layer relationships in EA models and for extensions to ArchiMate.