Data Currency Assessment through Data Mining Sergio Pio Alvarez*, Adriana Marotta* and Libertad Tansini* * Universidad de la República, Uruguay
Improving Model Quality through Foundational Ontologies: Two Contrasting Approaches to the Representation of Roles Sergio de Cesare*, Brian Henderson-Sellers**, Chris Partridge*'*** and Mark Lycett* * Brunel University London, UK ** University of Technology Sydney, Australia *** BORO Solution Ltd., UK
Evaluating the Gap between an RDF Dataset and Its Schema Kenza Kellou-Menouer* and Zoubida Kedad* * PRISM - University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France
Modeling Stories for Conceptual Model Assessment Bernardo Braga* and João Paulo Almeida* * Federal University of Espírito Santo (UFES), Brazil
Facilitation and Management of Modeling Projects: Experiences and Outlook Keynote by Janis Stirna* * Stockholm University, Sweden
Towards a Socio-Institutional Ontology for Conceptual Modelling of Information Systems Maria Bergholtz* and Owen Eriksson** * Stockholm University, Sweden ** Uppsala University, Sweden
Tuesday October 20, 2015 2:00pm - 3:30pm CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
Modeling and Utilizing Security Knowledge for Eliciting Security Requirements Tatsuya Abe*, Shinpei Hayashi* and Motoshi Saeki* * Tokyo Institute of Technology Ookayama, Japan
Towards the Derivation of Secure Business Process Designs Nikolaos Argyropoulos, Haralambos Mouratidis and Andrew Fish * University of Brighton, UK
Goal-Oriented Requirement Engineering Support for Business Continuity Planning Alvaro Arenas*, Philippe Massonet**, Christophe Ponsard ** and Benjamin Aziz*** * IE University, Spain ** CETIC Research Centre, Belgium *** University of Portsmouth, UK
Tuesday October 20, 2015 4:00pm - 5:30pm CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
A Use and Exchange Perspective for Explicating the Notion of Service Invited Talk by Paul Johannesson* * Stockholm University, Sweden
Providing Ontology-Based Privacy-Aware Data Access through Web Services Sven Hartmann*, Hui Ma** and Panrawee Vechsamutvaree** * Clausthal University of Technology, Germany ** Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Wednesday October 21, 2015 2:15pm - 3:45pm CEST
L70Borgarfjordsgatan 10
Models for NoSQL databases: a contradiction? Paolo Atzeni* * Università Roma Tre, Italy
A Food Recommendation System Based on Semantic Annotations and Reference Prescriptions Devis Bianchini*, Valeria De Antonellis* and Michele Melchiori* * University of Brescia, Italy
Wednesday October 21, 2015 2:15pm - 3:45pm CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
A Conceptual Model for Services Invited Talk by Bernhard Thalheim* and Ajantha Dahanayake** * Christian Albrechts University Kiel, Germany ** Prince Sultan University, Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Integration and Exchangeability of External Security-Critical Web Services in a Model-Driven Approach Marian Borek*, Kurt Stenzel*, Kuzman Katkalov* and Wolfgang Reif* * University of Augsburg, Germany
Wednesday October 21, 2015 4:15pm - 5:45pm CEST
L70Borgarfjordsgatan 10
Obtaining Key Performance Indicators by Using Data Mining Techniques Roberto Tardío* and Jesús Peral* * University of Alicante, Spain
Big Data Normalization for Massively Parallel Processing Databases Nikolay Golov* and Lars Rönnbäck** * Higher School of Economics, Russia ** Stockholm University, Sweden
I8K|DQ-BigData: I8K Architecture Extension for Data Quality in Big Data Bibiano Rivas*, Jorge Merino*, Manuel Serrano*, Ismael Caballero* and Mario Piattini* * Universidad de Castilla–La Mancha, Ciudad Real, Spain
Research on Big Data: Characterizing the Field and its Dimensions Jacky Akoka*'**, Isabelle Comyn-Wattiau*;*** and Nabil Laoufi* * CEDRIC-CNAM, France ** TEM-Institut Mines Telecom, France *** ESSEC Business School, France
Wednesday October 21, 2015 4:15pm - 5:45pm CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
A Study of Different Visualizations for Visualizing Differences in Process Models Manuel Gall*, Günter Wallner**, Simone Kriglstein***, Stefanie Rinderle-Ma* * University of Vienna, Austria ** University of Applied Arts Vienna, Austria *** Technical University of Vienna, Austria
Bitemporal Support for Business Process Contingency Management John Wondoh*, Georg Grossmann*, Dragan Gasevic**, Manfred Reichert***, Michael Schrefl****, Markus Stumptner* *University of South Australia, Australia ** University of Edinburgh, UK *** Ulm University, Germany **** Johannes Kepler University of Linz, Austria
Towards an Extended Metamodel of Event-driven Process Chains to Model Complex Event Patterns Julian Krumeich*, Nijat Mehdiyev*, Dirk Werth*, Peter Loos* * Institute for Information Systems (IWi) at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI GmbH), Germany Production Process Monitoring Using Model-Driven Event Processing Networks Falko Kötter* and Tobias Krause* * University of Stuttgart IAT, Germany
Thursday October 22, 2015 9:00am - 10:30am CEST
L70Borgarfjordsgatan 10
Invited Keynote: The Business Intelligence Model – Foundations, Experiences, and Ongoing Work Jennifer Horkoff
Business intelligence (BI) offers tremendous potential for business organizations to gain insights into their day-to-day operations, as well as longer term opportunities and threats. However, most of today’s BI tools are based on models that are too data-oriented from the point of view of business decision makers, difficult to understand in terms of business objectives and strategies. We have proposed to use conceptual modeling in order to bridge this gap between business-level understanding and representations in databases and data warehouses – making BI data meaningful. This talk summarizes past, current and future work on the Business Intelligence Model (BIM) conceptual modeling framework. BIM offers concepts familiar to business decision making—such as goals, strategies, processes, situations, influences, and indicators. Unlike many enterprise models which are meant to be used to derive, manage, or align with IT system implementations, BIM aims to help business users organize and make sense of the vast amounts of data about the enterprise and its external environment. This talk covers core BIM concepts, focusing especially on reasoning with BIM.
BIM includes both qualitative and quantitative reasoning about situations, goals and influences, using data from indicators. Formal reasoning techniques are available using a translation to a subset of the OWL Description Logic (DL). Such reasoning supports strategic analysis of business objectives in light of current enterprise data, allowing analysts to explore scenarios and find alternative strategies. BIM has been expanded to consider tactical refinement (TBIM), and to include the Five Forces Model, to better support strategic decision making. The framework has been applied to several large cases, including a large Canadian Hospital and a leisure cruise business. A prototype implementation has allowed for BIM and TBIM to be taught as part of a graduate course in Information Systems. Ongoing work has focused in several directions, including multidimensional views, comparison of strategic alternatives, and analyzing indicators to find new model relationships or more adequate measures.
Thursday October 22, 2015 9:00am - 10:30am CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
A First Framework for Top-K Cubes Queries Rahma Djiroun*, Sandro Bimonte** and Kamel Boukhalfa* * USTHB, Bab Ezzouar, Algeria ** IRSTEA, France
Model-based Requirements Engineering for Data Warehouses: From Multidimensional Modelling to KPI Monitoring Azadeh Nasiri**, Robert Wrembel* and Esteban Zimányi** * Poznan University of Technology, Poland ** Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Towards Ontology-driven RDF Analytics Bernd Neumayr*, Christoph G. Schuetz* and Michael Schrefl* * Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
Thursday October 22, 2015 11:00am - 12:30pm CEST
L50Borgarfjordsgatan 10
Opening: Conceptual Modeling for Ambient Assistance and Healthy Ageing - Challenges and Research Directions Heinrich C. Mayr* * Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, Austria
PersonLink: An Ontology Representing Family Relationships for the CAPTAIN MEMO Memory Prosthesis Noura Herradi*, Fayçal Hamdi*, Elisabeth Métais*, Fatma Ghorbel***, and Assia Soukane** * Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers (CNAM), Paris, France ** Ecole Centrale d'Electronique (ECE), Paris, France ** Université de Sfax, Tunisia
A Semantic Model for Proactive Home Care Systems Alencar Machado*'**, Leandro Krug Wives*, and José Palazzo Moreira de Oliveira* * Instituto de Informática, Brazil ** Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Brazil
Understanding Care Work and the Coordination of Care Process Conglomerations Monica Winge*, Erik Perjons*, Benkt Wangler* * Stockholm University, Sweden A Method to Analyze, Diagnose and Propose Innovations for Complex Ecosystems: the InnoServ Project Mario Cortes-Cornax*, Dominique Rieu*, Christine Verdier*, Agnès Front*, Fabrice Forest**, Annabelle Mercier***, Anne Marie Benoit****, Aurélien Faravelon***** * Univ. Grenoble Alpes, France ** SFR INNOVACS, France *** Univ. Grenoble Alpes, France **** CNRS, France ***** Institut Rhone-Alpin des Systèmes Complexes, France Concluding Discussion
Thursday October 22, 2015 11:00am - 1:00pm CEST
L70Borgarfjordsgatan 10