Gruninger, Michael
The Process Specification Language (PSL) Theory and Applications
Gruninger, Michael, Menzel, Christopher
The PROCESS SPECIFICATION language (PSL) has been designed to facilitate correct and complete exchange of process information among manufacturing systems, such as scheduling, process modeling, process planning, production planning, simulation, project management, work flow, and business-process reengineering. We give an overview of the theories within the PSL ontology, discuss some of the design principles for the ontology, and finish with examples of process specifications that are based on the ontology.
Enterprise Modeling
Fox, Mark S., Gruninger, Michael
To remain competitive, enterprises must become increasingly agile and integrated across their functions. Enterprise models play a critical role in this integration, enabling better designs for enterprises, analysis of their performance, and management of their operations. This article motivates the need for enterprise models and introduces the concepts of generic and deductive enterprise models. It reviews research to date on enterprise modeling and considers in detail the Toronto virtual enterprise effort at the University of Toronto.
AAAI 1997 Spring Symposium Reports
Gaines, Brian R., Musen, Mark A., Uthurusamy, Ramasamy, Haller, Susan, McRoy, Susan, Oard, Douglas, Hull, David, Hauptmann, Alexander, Witbrock, Michael, Mahesh, Kevin, Farquhar, Adam, Gruninger, Michael, Doyle, Jon R., Thomason, Richard H.
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) held its 1997 Spring Symposium Series on 24 to 26 March at Stanford University in Stanford, California. This article contains summaries of the seven symposia that were conducted: (1) Artificial Intelligence in Knowledge Management; (2) Computational Models for Mixed-Initiative Interaction; (3) Cross-Language Text and Speech Retrieval; (4) Intelligent Integration and Use of Text, Image, Video, and Audio Corpora; (5) Natural Language Processing for the World Wide Web; (6) Ontological Engineering; and (7) Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning.
AAAI 1997 Spring Symposium Reports
Gaines, Brian R., Musen, Mark A., Uthurusamy, Ramasamy, Haller, Susan, McRoy, Susan, Oard, Douglas, Hull, David, Hauptmann, Alexander, Witbrock, Michael, Mahesh, Kevin, Farquhar, Adam, Gruninger, Michael, Doyle, Jon R., Thomason, Richard H.
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) held its 1997 Spring Symposium Series on 24 to 26 March at Stanford University in Stanford, California. This article contains summaries of the seven symposia that were conducted: (1) Artificial Intelligence in Knowledge Management; (2) Computational Models for Mixed-Initiative Interaction; (3) Cross-Language Text and Speech Retrieval; (4) Intelligent Integration and Use of Text, Image, Video, and Audio Corpora; (5) Natural Language Processing for the World Wide Web; (6) Ontological Engineering; and (7) Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning.