Papers by Glaice Kelly Quirino Monfardini

Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM Symposium on Applied Computing - SAC '16, 2016
The notion of service spans several domains, such as healthcare, education, and information and c... more The notion of service spans several domains, such as healthcare, education, and information and communication technology (ICT). In this context, service ontologies are very useful for establishing a common understanding of the main concepts and relations involved, as well as for serving as basis for modeling services in different domains. In this paper, we present an Ontology Pattern Language, called S-OPL, providing a network of interconnected ontology modeling patterns covering the core conceptualization of services. S-OPL builds on UFO-S, a commitment-based core ontology for services. S-OPL patterns support modeling types of customers and providers, as well as the main service life-cycle phases, namely: service offering, service negotiation/agreement, and service delivery. The use of S-OPL is demonstrated in a real case in the ICT service domain.
(CIP) (eDOC BRASIL, Belo Horizonte/MG) P964 A produção do conhecimento nas ciências exatas e da t... more (CIP) (eDOC BRASIL, Belo Horizonte/MG) P964 A produção do conhecimento nas ciências exatas e da terra 3 [recurso eletrônico] / Organizadora Ingrid Aparecida Gomes.-Ponta Grossa (PR): Atena Editora, 2019.-(A produção do Conhecimento nas Ciências Exatas e da Terra; v. 3) Formato: PDF Requisitos de sistema: Adobe Acrobat Reader Modo de acesso: World Wide Web Inclui bibliografia ISBN 978-85-7247-240-1
The notion of service spans several domains, such as healthcare, education, and information and c... more The notion of service spans several domains, such as healthcare, education, and information and communication technology (ICT). In this context, service ontologies are very useful for establishing a common understanding of the main concepts and relations involved, as well as for serving as basis for modeling services in different domains. In this paper, we present an Ontology Pattern Language, called S-OPL, providing a network of interconnected ontology modeling patterns covering the core conceptualization of services. S-OPL builds on UFO-S, a commitment-based core ontology for services. S-OPL patterns support modeling types of customers and providers, as well as the main service life-cycle phases, namely: service offering, service negotiation/agreement, and service delivery. The use of S-OPL is demonstrated in a real case in the ICT service domain.

Project Management is a complex process involving several activities and a large volume of inform... more Project Management is a complex process involving several activities and a large volume of information. There are several tools offering partial solutions for supporting this process, increasing the need for integrating some of them, in order to provide a fuller support to the Project Management process. This paper presents an integration initiative aiming at semantically integrating dotProject, a web-based project management application, to ODE, an Ontology-based software Development Environment. This integration initiative focuses on the project time management, mainly for supporting the following activities: definition of project activities, allocation of human resource to these activities, and scheduling. This initiative was conducted partially following OBA-SI, an Ontology-Based Approach for Semantic Integration, and it was done using a domain ontology built from a Software Process Ontology Pattern Language.

Many efforts have been made for modeling and standardizing software processes. ISO/IEC JTC1/SC7, ... more Many efforts have been made for modeling and standardizing software processes. ISO/IEC JTC1/SC7, the ISO sub-committee responsible for software and systems engineering, is one of the most important groups devoted to this task. However, standards developed by this committee are frequently inconsistent and even contradictory. This led to the need for an ISO Study Group to investigate the creation of an ontological infrastructure to establish a common conceptualization for underpinning all SC7 standards. This ISO initiative is a work in progress, which has focused on the software process domain and, in particular, considering the ISO/IEC 24744 standard. In this paper, we advocate in favor of using an Ontology Pattern Language (OPL) as the main component of this ontological infrastructure. We present ISP-OPL (ISO-based Software Process OPL), an OPL that can be applied as a basis for harmonizing software process-related ISO standards, favoring reuse when building aligned specific software process ontologies for Software Engineering sub- domains. In order to evaluate its applicability, we conducted an experiment involving seven domain ontologies, developed using ISP-OPL.
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Papers by Glaice Kelly Quirino Monfardini