3M4SE 2010 - International Workshop on Models and Model-driven Methods for Service Engineering

in conjunction with the Fourteenth IEEE International EDOC Conference (EDOC 2010)

"The Enterprise Computing Conference"

25-29 October 2010, Vitória, ES, Brazil

http://edocconference.org

Deadline for workshop paper submissions: 17 April 2010.
The paper submission deadline has been extended to 2 May 2010.


Call for Papers



ABOUT THE WORKSHOP


Recent developments in meta-modelling and model transformation techniques have led to increasing adoption of model-driven engineering practices. The increase in interest and significance of the model-driven approach has also accelerated its application in the development of large (distributed) IT systems to support (collaborative) enterprises. Shifting attention from source code to models permits enterprises to focus on their core concerns, such as business processes, services and collaborations, without being forced to simultaneously consider the underlying technologies. Different concerns are typically addressed by different models, with transformations between the models and ultimately to the source code. Although the model-driven approach offers theoretical benefits for the development, maintenance and evolution of enterprise computing systems and corresponding service oriented solutions, a number of issues for the practical application of the approach still exist. In order to solve these issues further advances in models (business goals, pragmatic interoperability, semantic interoperability) and model-driven methods (design concepts, languages, metamodels, profiles, specification frameworks) are necessary.  

This workshop aims at helping the convergence of research on model-driven development and practical application of the model-driven approach in the area of enterprise computing and service engineering. The workshop addresses questions with respect to the requirements on, concepts for, properties of and experience with models and model-driven methods for service engineering in the area of enterprise computing. A special focus will be on the combined application of model-driven and semantic approaches in the different phases of the service lifecycle.


TOPICS


The workshop invites original submissions from both researchers and practitioners in the following (non-exhaustive) list of topics:

- Model-driven service-oriented design process, milestones and design guidelines for service engineering (business goals, pragmatic interoperability, semantic interoperability);

- Modelling techniques for Service-Oriented Architectures (design concepts, languages, metamodels,  profiles and specification frameworks);

- Full lifecycle requirements management for service systems;

- Modelling of non-functional and Quality-of-Service characteristics;

- Modelling, analysis and execution of service compositions;

- Platform-independent modelling techniques;

- Mappings and transformation patterns from platform-independent models to specific technology platforms (Web Services, J2EE, .NET, etc.).

- Limitations of UML for MDA-SOA, alternative languages;

- Model-driven service description, publication and discovery;

- Platform models and generic platform types;

- Use of viewpoints, relations and correspondences between viewpoints for model-driven service-oriented design;

- Implications of (middleware) platform characteristics for the model-driven design process;

- Empirical studies and experience reports on models and model-driven methods.


IMPORTANT DATES


Paper submission due: 17 April 2010. The paper submission deadline has been extended to 2 May 2010.

Notification to authors: 4 June 2010 

Camera ready due: 28 June 2010 

Workshop:  25th or 26th October 2010


SUBMISSION GUIDELINES


The workshop welcomes submissions of full papers (8 to 10 pages long) and position papers (around 4 pages) in the IEEE Computer Society format. Full research papers should describe original results that have not been accepted or submitted for publication elsewhere. These papers will be evaluated for scientific or technical contribution, originality, appropriateness and significance. 

Position papers should describe new insights gained, should define new problems or research directions and/or  and pose challenges for researchers. These papers will be evaluated based on their appropriateness, significance, clarity and on their potential to trigger interesting discussions on the day of the workshop.

All submissions must comply with the IEEE Computer Society conference proceedings format guidelines (http://www2.computer.org/portal/web/cscps/formatting) (please use the latest template as there have been updates recently). Submissions must be in English. 

Submissions should be submitted in PDF format using the EasyChair system (see http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=3m4se2010). 

All papers will be refereed by at least 3 members of the international program committee. 

At least one author of each accepted paper must participate in the workshop and register for the whole conference. Accepted papers will be published pre-conference by the University of Twente as part of the CTIT Workshop Proceedings Series (ISSN 1381-3625). After the conference, the workshop proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press and will be accessible through IEEE Xplore and the IEEE Computer Society Digital Library. The IEEE reserves the right to exclude a paper from distribution after the conference (e.g., removal from IEEE Xplore) if the paper is not presented at the workshop.


ORGANIZING COMMITTEE


- Marten van Sinderen (University of Twente, The Netherlands), E-mail: m.j.vansinderen@utwente.nl

- Luís Ferreira Pires (University of Twente, The Netherlands), E-mail: l.ferreirapires@utwente.nl

- Maria-Eugenia Iacob (University of Twente, The Netherlands), E-mail: m.e.iacob@utwente.nl


PROGRAM COMMITTEE


Dave Akehurst (Thales, UK)

João Paulo Almeida (Federal University of Espírito Santo, Brazil)

Colin Atkinson (University of Mannheim, Germany)

Mariano Belaunde (France Telecom R&D, France)

Behzad Bordbar (University of Birmingham, UK)

Antonio Brogi (University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy)

Chi-Hung Chi (Tsinghua University, China)

Remco Dijkman (Eindhoven University, The Netherlands)

Schahram Dustar (Vienna Univ. of Technology, Austria)

Marlon Dumas (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)

David Frankel (David Frankel Consulting, USA)

Roy Grønmo (SINTEF, Norway)

Cléver Ricardo Guareis de Farias (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil)

Slimane Hammoudi (ESEA, France)

Patrick Hung (University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada)

Lea Kutvonen (University of Helsinki, Finland)

Peter Linington (University of Kent, UK)

Oscar Pastor (Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain)

Dick Quartel (Novay, The Netherlands)

Richard Soley (Object Management Group, USA)

Maarten Steen (Novay, The Netherlands)

Antonio Vallecillo (University of Málaga, Spain)

Branimir Wetzstein (University of Stuttgart, Germany)

Note:  Workshop program inquiries should be sent to the workshop organisers.

WORKSHOP PROGRAM




October, 25th
9:00 – Workshop Opening


09:00 – 10:00 - Invited Talk: Roy Grønmo, SINTEF, Norway


10:00 – 10:30 -  Model-Driven Development of Aspectual Pervasive Software Services, Dhaminda Abeywickrama and Sita Ramakrishnan


10:30 - 11:00 - Coffee Break


11:00 – 11:30 - Applicability of Process Viewing Patterns in Business Process Management,    David Schumm, Tobias Anstett, Frank Leymann and Daniel Schleicher


11:30 – 12:00 -  Mapping the Substation Configuration Language of IEC 61850 to ArchiMate Johan König, Kun Zhu, Lars Nordström, Mathias Ekstedt and Robert Lagerström


12:00 – 12:30 - Model-Driven Development Methodology for B2B Collaborations, Ivanna Lazarte, Edgar Tello-Leal, Jorge Roa, Omar Chiotti and Pablo Villarreal.


Invited talk: Benefits and Challenges of using Aspects in Model-Driven Service Engineering
Speaker: dr. Roy Gronmo

Abstract:
Aspect-orientation was introduced as a means to better modularize program code. The aspect idea can be helpful also at the modeling level. This talk will focus on typical use cases for aspects in model-driven service engineering. It is shown how aspects can be specified and integrated (or 'woven' in aspect-oriented terms) with the rest of the models. We will highlight some benefits and challenges of using aspects.


Short bio:
Roy Gronmo is a research scientist at SINTEF and at the University of Oslo. Since 2010 he holds doctor degree in Computer science from the same university. His research interests primarily lie in the areas of graph-based model transformations and model-driven service engineering.


IEEE EDOC 2010 Sponsors

IEEE Computer Society          
IEEE Communications Society  IEEE 


 

In Cooperation With

ACM - Association for Computing MachineryACM SIGSOFT - ACM Special Interest Group on Software Engineering ACM SIGAPP - ACM Special Interest Group on Applied Computing

Supporters

CGI.br NIC.brUFES

OMG 

      The Open Group 

 

 

Patrons

FACITEC / CDV / PMV CAPES

FEST