EDOC '05 Proceedings of the Ninth IEEE International EDOC Enterprise Computing Conference
Supporting strategic enterprise processes: An analysis of various architectural frameworks
Information-Knowledge-Systems Management - Work, Workflow, Information Systems and Enterprise Transformation
Question framework for architectural description quality evaluation
Software Quality Control
Towards a Common Terminology in the Discipline of Enterprise Architecture
Service-Oriented Computing --- ICSOC 2008 Workshops
Proviado – personalized and configurable visualizations of business processes
EC-Web'06 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on E-Commerce and Web Technologies
Non-materialized model view specification with triple graph grammars
ICGT'06 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Graph Transformations
Modeling the linguistic architecture of software products
MODELS'12 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems
Computer Standards & Interfaces
The Reference Model of Open Distributed Processing: Foundations, experience and applications
Computer Standards & Interfaces
The Anatomy of the ArchiMate Language
International Journal of Information System Modeling and Design
Engineering Security Agreements Against External Insider Threat
Information Resources Management Journal
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Increasingly, organisations establish what is called an enterprise architecture. The enterprise architecture combines and relates all architectures describing some aspect of the organization, such as the business process architecture, the information architecture, and the application architecture. It is a blueprint of the organisation, which serves as a starting point for analysis, design and decision making. Viewpoints define abstractions on the set of models representing the enterprise architecture, each aimed at a particular type of stakeholder and addressing a particular set of concerns. The use of viewpoints is widely advocated for managing the inherent complexity in enterprise architecture. Viewpoints can both be used to view certain aspects in isolation, and for relating two or more aspects. However, in order to make such a viewpoint-oriented approach practically feasible, architects require a tool environment, which supports the definition, generation, editing and management of architectural views. Moreover, such an environment should work in concert with existing domain-specific modelling tools. In this paper, we present the design of such a tool environment for viewpoint-oriented enterprise architecture.