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TEAR 2008 : The 3rd Workshop on Trends in Enterprise Architecture ResearchConference Series : Trends in Enterprise Architecture Research | |||||||||||
Link: http://ics.kth.se/TEAR | |||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||
The 3rd Workshop on Trends in Enterprise Architecture Research (TEAR 2008)
December 1, 2008, Sydney, Australia The workshop will be held in conjunction with the 6th International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC'08), which takes place Dec. 2-5, 2008; http://www.icsoc.org/ IMPORTANT DATES =============== Oct 6, 2008 Full paper submission Nov 3, 2008 Notifications Nov 21, 2008 Submission of camera-ready version Dec 1, 2008 Workshop WORKSHOP TOPIC ============== The field of enterprise architecture attracted the attention of the research community for the first time when Zachman introduced the Framework for Information Systems Architecture in 1987. However, it was not until 1996 that enterprise architecture emerged as an active field of business activity and research. Enterprise architecture (EA) is important because organizations need to adapt increasingly fast to changing customer requirements and business goals. This need influences the entire chain of activities of an enterprise, from business processes to IT support. To keep the enterprise architecture coherent and aligned with business goals, the relations between the different architectures must be clearly defined and consistent. In previous years the emergence of service oriented design paradigms (e.g. Service Oriented Architecture, SOA) contributed to the relevance of enterprise architectures. The need to design services along business processes forced companies to pay more attention to business architectures. The growing complexity of existing application landscapes lead to increased attention to application architectures at the same time. To better align business and IS architectures a number of major companies started to establish EA efforts after introducing service oriented architectures. Until recently, practitioners, consulting firms and tool vendors have been leading in the development of the EA discipline. Research on enterprise architecture has been taking place in relatively isolated communities. The main objective of this workshop is to bring these different communities of EA researchers together and to identify future directions for EA research with special focus on service oriented paradigms. An important question in that respect is what EA researchers should do, as opposed to EA practitioners. Topics of interest to the workshop include, but are not limited to: - Case studies - Combining BPM and EA - Drivers and obstacles of EA dissemination (e.g. agility, flexibility, strategic planning, usage resistance) - EA and e-government - EA and organizational theory - EA and system development - EA business cases - EA communication and marketing - EA for small and medium-sized companies - EA governance and integration into corporate/IT governance - EA in university and executive education - EA reference models, meta models and frameworks - EA usage in corporate strategic planning - EA usage potentials for the networked enterprise - Enterprise modelling, EA and MDA - Event-driven architecture - Evolution of an EA - Incorporation of knowledge management and software engineering in EA - Integrating service oriented and legacy architectures - Managing complexity in EA - Maturity models for EA artifacts and processes - Measurement, metrics, analysis, and evaluation of EA artifacts and processes - Methodologies for EA research - Processes and patterns for EA development, mastering, communication and enforcement - Service design on application and business levels - Service orientation as EA design paradigm - Service oriented architecture (SOA) and EA - The relation between natural and EA modelling languages (understandability of EA models) - Tool support for EA - Viewpoints in EA SUBMISSION ========== Papers should describe innovative and significant original research relevant to TEAR as described above. Papers submitted for consideration must not have been published elsewhere and must not be under review or submitted for review elsewhere during the duration of consideration. All papers must be prepared in accordance with the Springer/LNCS camera-ready format and be submitted electronically (in PDF) via the submission website: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tear2008 Research papers are not to exceed 15 pages, including all references and figures. All submissions should include title, authors, and full contact information. Detailed instructions for authors are available on the LNCS website. REVIEW AND EVALUATION CRITERIA ============================== Submissions will be evaluated on the basis of originality, importance of contribution, soundness, quality of presentation, and appropriate comparison to related work. The program committee as a whole will make final decisions about which submissions to accept for presentation at the conference. All accepted papers will appear in the ICSOC 2008 workshop proceedings, published by Springer Verlag as a part of its Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. At least one author of accepted papers is expected to present the results at the TEAR 2008 workshop. WORKSHOP WEBSITE ================ Additional information can be found on the workshop website: http://ics.kth.se/TEAR/ WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS =================== Pontus Johnson, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Joachim Schelp, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland Stephan Aier, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland MEMBERS OF THE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE ================================== - Guiseppe Berio, University of Turin, Italy - Scott Bernard, Carnegie Mellon University, Syracuse University, USA - Udo Bub, Deutsche Telekom Laboratories, Germany - Luis Camarinha-Matos, UNINOVA, Portugal - Haluk Demirkan, Arizona State University, USA - Andreas Dietzsch, Postfinance, Bern, Switzerland - Peter Emmel, SAP, Germany - Mathias Ekstedt, KTH, Sweden - Ulrich Frank, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany - Matthias Goeken, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Germany - Jan Goossenaerts, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, The Netherlands - Michael Goul, Arizona State University, USA - Dimitris Karagiannis, University of Vienna, Austria - Marc Lankhorst, Telematica Instituut, Enschede, The Netherlands - Tim O'Neill, University of Technology, Sydney - Erik Proper, Radboud University Nijmegen and Capgemini, The Netherlands - Gerold Riempp, European Business School (EBS), Germany - Michael Rosemann, QUT, Australia - Marten Sch?nherr, TU Berlin, Germany - Gerhard Schwabe, University of Zurich, Switzerland - Markus Strohmaier, University of Toronto, Canada - Jos? Tribolet, University of Lisbon, Portugal - Hongbing Wang, Nanjing University, China - Alain Wegmann, EPFL, Switzerland - Martin Zelm, CIMOSA, Germany - Michael zur M?hlen, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA |
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