New directions for systems analysis and design
Enterprise information systems
The Power of Events: An Introduction to Complex Event Processing in Distributed Enterprise Systems
The Power of Events: An Introduction to Complex Event Processing in Distributed Enterprise Systems
Aris-Business Process Frameworks
Aris-Business Process Frameworks
Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design
Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design
Reengineering the Dutch Flower Auctions: a Framework for Analyzing Exchange Organizations
Information Systems Research
Introduction: Service-oriented computing
Communications of the ACM - Service-oriented computing
Workflow analysis with communication norms
Data & Knowledge Engineering - Special issue: The language/action perspective
Enterprise Ontology: Theory and Methodology
Enterprise Ontology: Theory and Methodology
Rule responder: RuleML-based agents for distributed collaboration on the pragmatic web
ICPW '07 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Pragmatic web
Connection Science - Language and Robots
Supporting RBAC with XACML+OWL
Proceedings of the 14th ACM symposium on Access control models and technologies
Event-driven service coordination for business process integration in ubiquitous enterprises
Computers and Industrial Engineering
The Internet of Things: A survey
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
A Methodology for Dynamic Service Compositions Based on an Event-Driven Approach
SRII '11 Proceedings of the 2011 Annual SRII Global Conference
The pragmatic web: putting rules in context
RuleML'12 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Rules on the Web: research and applications
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Event-Driven Architectures are a critical instrument for tomorrow's fast-acting and agile enterprises. To benefit maximally from the technological innovations in service-oriented computing, businesses need to link an event orientation to a service perspective. However, this cannot be done effectively without considering the pragmatics of event-driven business processes. This paper first introduces a design method for event-driven business processes based on an integrative event ontology. This method is confronted with communication-oriented approaches from the Language/Action Perspectiv (LAP). It is shown that a combination is possible and in fact beneficial. However, a generalization of the traditional LAP approach is needed.