International Workshop on Fact-Oriented Modeling
(ORM 2010)
Hersonissou, Crete, Greece
October 27-29, 2010
Proceedings will be published by Springer Verlag
Paper Submission Extended Deadline: 2010 July 6
(abstracts due June 22)
Background:
Unlike Entity-Relationship (ER) modeling and UML class diagrams, fact-oriented modeling treats all facts as relationships (unary, binary, ternary etc.). How facts are grouped into structures (e.g. attribute-based entity types, classes, relation schemes, XML schemas) is considered a design level, implementation issue that is irrelevant to the capturing of essential business semantics. Avoiding attributes in the base model enhances semantic stability and populatability, as well as facilitating natural verbalization and thus more productive communication with all stakeholders. For information modeling, fact-oriented graphical notations are typically far more expressive than those provided by other notations. Fact-oriented textual languages are based on formal subsets of native languages, so are easier to understand by business people than technical languages like OCL. Fact-oriented modeling includes procedures for mapping to attribute-based structures, so may also be used to front-end other approaches.
Fact-oriented modeling has been used successfully in industry for over 30 years, and is taught in universities around the world. The fact-oriented modeling approach comprises a family of closely related “dialects”, the most well known being Object-Role Modeling (ORM), Cognition enhanced Natural language Information Analysis Method (CogNIAM) and Fully-Communication Oriented Information Modeling (FCO-IM). Though adopting a different graphical notation, the Object-oriented Systems Model (OSM) is a close relative, with its attribute-free philosophy. The Semantics of Business Vocabulary and Business Rules (SBVR) proposal adopted by the Object Management Group in 2007 is a recent addition to the family of fact-oriented approaches.
Commercial tools supporting the fact-oriented approach include the ORM solution within Microsoft’s Visio for Enterprise Architects, the CogNIAM tool Doctool, the FCO-IM tool CaseTalk, and the Collibra ontology tool suite. The NORMA (Natural ORM Architect) tool for ORM 2 is available as a free, open-source plug-in to Visual Studio; a commercial, professional version of NORMA is also under development. Free ORM tools include InfoModeler, Infagon, ActiveFacts, and ORM-Lite. DogmaStudio is an ORM-based tool for specifying ontologies. Various SBVR tools are also currently under development. General information about fact-orientation may be found at The ORM Foundation site www.ORMFoundation.org.
Goals and Topics:
The main goal of this workshop is to provide a forum for practitioners and researchers interested in fact-oriented modeling methods to meet, and exchange research and implementation ideas and results. It also provides this group of practitioners/researchers an opportunity to present their research papers and experience reports, and to take part in open discussions. Relevant topics include (but are not limited to) theoretical and/or empirical exploration of fact-oriented modeling methods, as well as case studies and experience reports related to:
• Theory/principles of fact-oriented modeling (ORM, CogNIAM, SBVR, FCO-IM etc.)
• Application of fact-oriented modeling to data warehousing and business intelligence
• Fact-oriented integration of business information, processes and events
• Fact-oriented modeling of ontologies
• Metamodels for fact-oriented modeling and business practice
• Fact-oriented metamodeling best practices
• Fact orientation, communication and understandability
• Industrial experience with fact-oriented modeling
• Fact-orientation and terminology science and practice
• Fact-oriented application generation
• Educational experience with fact-oriented modeling
• Fact-oriented modeling and business rules
• Temporal issues in fact-oriented modeling
• Fact-oriented modeling and business service modeling
• Fact-oriented modeling and workflow modeling
• Agent-oriented extensions to fact-oriented modeling
• Tools to support fact-oriented modeling and business practice
• Fact-orientation and verbalization of business rules
• Fact-orientation and validation of business rules
• Fact-oriented query languages
• Transforming fact-based models to/from attribute-based models
• Comparing fact-orientation with other approaches
Intended Audience:
Workshop co-chairs:
Terry Halpin
LogicBlox, Australia and INTI Education Group, Malaysia
Herman Balsters
University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Important Dates (2010):
Paper Submission Deadline: July 06
Acceptance Notification: Jul 30
Camera Ready Due: Aug 13
Registration Due: Sep 3
OTM Conferences: Oct 25 - 29, 2010
Submission Guidelines:
http://www.onthemove-conferences.org/index.php/submitpaper
On the original submission, include a cover page with title of paper as well as the authors’ names, affiliations, phones, faxes, and email addresses. The total number of words in the paper (excluding cover page, tables, and references) should be indicated on the cover page. The second page should begin with the title of the paper followed by author names and affiliations and an abstract of no more than 150 words.
The proceedings will be published by Springer Verlag in their LNCS (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) series. The final paper (if accepted) should be formatted using the Springer LNCS style, as described at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. Failure to commit to presentation at the workshop automatically excludes a paper from the proceedings.
Program committee (to be expanded):
Herman Balsters, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Scott Becker, Orthogonal Software, USA
Linda Bird, Independent Contractor, Australia
Anthony Bloesch, Microsoft Corporation, USA
Peter Bollen, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
Lex Bruil, ING Netherlands
Andy Carver, INTI Education Group, Malaysia
Matthew Curland, LogicBlox, USA
Dave Cuyler, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
Necito Dela Cruz, Boston Scientific, USA
Olga De Troyer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Gordon Everest, University of Minnesota, USA
Ken Evans, ORM Foundation and University of Lincoln, UK
Pat Hallock, InConcept, USA
Terry Halpin, LogicBlox, Australia and INTI Education Group, Malaysia
Stijn Hoppenbrouwers, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Mike Jackson, Birmingham City University, United Kingdom
Mustafa Jarrar, Birzeit University, Palestine
Marijke Keet, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy
Tony Morgan, INTI Education Group, Malaysia
Maurice Nijssen, PNA, The Netherlands
Baba Piprani, SICOM, Canada
Erik Proper, Public Research Centre Henri Tudor, Luxembourg
Ron Ross, Business Rules Solutions, USA
Gerhard Skagestein, University of Oslo, Norway
Deny Smeets, HAN University, The Netherlands
Silvie Spreeuwenberg, LibRT, The Netherlands
Peter Spyns, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Kurt Stirewalt, LogicBlox, USA
Serge Valera, European Space Agency, The Netherlands
Jan Vanthienen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Jos Vos, ABP/AMC, Heerlen, The Netherlands
Theo van der Weide, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Joost van Griethuysen, MMJ Engineering, The Netherlands
For more information on the workshop, please contact:
Dr Terry Halpin
e-mail:
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