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Volume 3, Issue 2, April - June 2006 : International Journal of Web Services Research (JWSR)
Apologies if you received this multiple times. Thank you.
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The contents of the latest issue of:
International Journal of Web Services Research (JWSR)
Official Publication of the Information Resources Management Association
Volume 3, Issue 2, April - June 2006
Published: Quarterly in Print and Electronically
ISSN: 1545-7362
EISSN: 1546-5004
http://www.servicescomputing.org/jwsr
Editor-In-Chief: Liang-Jie Zhang, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center USA
EDITORIAL PREFACE:
“Web Services in Data, Control, and Applications”
Jia Zhang, Northern Illinois University, USA
Liang-Jie Zhang, Editor-In-Chief, IBM, T.J. Watson Research Center, USA
This issue of the International Journal of Web Services research (JWSR)
is a collection of five papers on various topics of Web services.
RESEARCH PAPERS
PAPER ONE:
“Search Strategies for Automatic Web Service Composition”
Nikola Milanovic, Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
Miroslaw Malek, Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
This paper investigates architectural properties required for supporting
automatic service composition. First, composable service architecture will
be described, based on modeling Web Services as abstract machines supported
by formally defined composition operators. Based on the proposed infrastructure,
the authors give several options for achieving automatic service composition
by treating it as a search problem. Namely, basic heuristic, probabilistic,
learning-based, decomposition and bidirectional automatic composition mechanisms
will be presented and compared. Finally, this article discusses the impact
and outlook for automatic composition.
To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.idea-group.com/articles/details.asp?id=5964
PAPER TWO:
“XWRAPComposer: A Multi-Page Data Extraction Service”
Ling Liu, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Jianjun Zhang, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Wei Han, IBM Research, Almaden Research Center, USA
Calton Pu, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
James Caverlee, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Sungkeun Park, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Terence Critchlow, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
David Buttler, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
Matthew Coleman, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
The authors of this paper present a service-oriented architecture and a
set of techniques for developing wrapper code generators, including the
methodology of designing an effective wrapper program construction facility
and a concrete implementation, called XWRAPComposer. This wrapper generation
framework has two unique design goals. First, the authors explicitly separate
tasks of building wrappers that are specific to a Web service from the
tasks that are repetitive for any service. Second, inductive learning
algorithms that derive information flow and data extraction patterns by
reasoning about sample pages or sample specifications are used. More importantly,
the authors design a declarative rule-based script language for multi-page
information extraction, encouraging a clean separation of the information
extraction semantics from the information flow control and execution logic
of wrapper programs.
To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.idea-group.com/articles/details.asp?id=5965
PAPER THREE:
“An Ontology-Based Content Model for Intelligent Web Content Access Services”
Stephen J. H. Yang, National Central University, Taiwan
Norman W. Y. Shao, National Kaohsiung First University of Science and Technology,
Taiwan
Intelligent Web content access is a fundamental Web service, representing
the first step toward semantic Web services. A lack of adequate and sufficient
interpretation for content in current methods impedes access to content.
This study regards Web content as any content described and published in
the format of a markup language such as HTML or XML. In this paper, the
authors present the Content Model, combining subjective information from
the content itself with objective information from people’s perceptions
of this content, providing an integrated interpretation of a content item.
During accessing, a search engine examines the description of a content
item, as found in the Content Model, to find matching files. An ontology-based
Content Model is developed and applied to the Web environment to enhance
Web content accessibility. Results of this study demonstrate that the proposed
Content Model provides essential content descriptions for locating, accessing,
and interacting with content providers.
To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.idea-group.com/articles/details.asp?id=5966
PAPER FOUR:
“Self-Reconfiguration of Service-Based System for Service Level Agreements
and Resource Optimization”
Ying Li, IBM China Research Laboratory, China
Kewei Sun, IBM China Research Laboratory, China
Jie Qiu, IBM China Research Laboratory, China
Ying Chen, IBM China Research Laboratory, China
In this paper, the authors propose an autonomic computing approach to the
problem of reconfiguration, that is, enabling the service-based system
to configure itself by means of a loop of monitoring, analyzing, planning
and executing. This article begins by formalizing the definition of reconfiguration.
Then, a description is given on how to implement the autonomic computing
mechanisms for reconfiguring service-based systems to satisfy Service Level
Agreements with minimal resource consumption. The approach is demonstrated
on a resilient service provisioning environment. Finally, the preliminary
experiments are evaluated to determine the effectiveness of the proposed
approach.
To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.idea-group.com/articles/details.asp?id=5967
PAPER FIVE:
“UML-Based Support for Designing and Validating Web Service Descriptions”
Juanjuan Jiang, Tampere University of Technology, Finland
Tarja Systä, Tampere University of Technology, Finland
WSDL descriptions, often characterized as IDLs for Web services, are a
key for Web service interoperability. Therefore, special care should be
taken in designing WSDL descriptions. In this paper, the authors present
an approach that provides UML-based support to design and validate WSDL
descriptions. To promote Web service interoperability, WS-I organization
provides a Basic Profile that defines clarifications, refinements, interpretations,
and amplifications of Web service specifications, including WSDL. The article
suggests UML-based profiles to define structural rules of WSDL documents
as well as Basic Profile recommendations for WSDL descriptions. These profiles
can be used to guide the user in designing correct and Basic-Profile-compliant
WSDL descriptions and to check the validity of existing WSDL descriptions.
A method and tools for such validity checking is proposed, and the applicability
of the approach with case studies.
To obtain a copy of the entire article, click on the link below.
http://www.idea-group.com/articles/details.asp?id=5968
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For full copies of the above articles, check for this issue of the International
Journal of Web Services Research (JWSR) in your Institution's library.
If your library is not currently subscribed to this Journal, please
recommend JWSR subscription to your librarian.
*****************************************************
Note: For only $18.00, purchase a JWSR article or any of over 1,100
single journal articles available electronically by visiting www.idea-group.com/articles.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Mission of JWSR:
Web Services are among the most important emerging technologies in the
e-business, computer software and communication industries. The Web Services
technologies will redefine the way that companies do business and exchange
information in the twenty-first century. They will enhance business efficiency
by enabling dynamic provisioning of resources from a pool of distributed
resources. Due to the importance of the field, there is a significant amount
of ongoing research in the areas. In a parallel effort, standardization
organizations are actively developing standards for Web Services. The Web
Services are creating what will become one of the most significant industries
of the new century. The International Journal of Web Services Research
is designed to be a valuable resource providing leading technologies, development,
ideas, and trends to an international readership of researchers and engineers
in the field of Web Services.
Coverage of JWSR:
Web Services architecture
Web Services security
Frameworks for building Web Service applications
Composite Web Service creation and enabling infrastructures
Web Services discovery
Resource management for Web Services
Solution Management for Web Services
Dynamic invocation mechanisms for Web Services
Quality of service for Web Services
Web Services modeling
Web Services performance
UDDI enhancements
SOAP enhancements
Case Studies for Web Services
E-Commerce applications using Web Services
Grid based Web Services applications (e.g. OGSA)
Business process integration and management using Web Services
Multimedia applications using Web Services
Mathematic foundations for service oriented computing
Communication applications using Web Services
Interactive TV applications using Web Services
Semantic services computing
Business Grid
Interested authors should consult the Journal's manuscript submission guidelines
at http://www.idea-group.com/jwsr
. Please submit your paper through the online system (http://www.servicescomputing.org/jwsr).
All inquiries should be sent to:
Editor-In-Chief: Dr. Liang-Jie Zhang at zhanglj
AT us.ibm.com