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Dive into the research topics where Liliana Cabral is active.

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Featured researches published by Liliana Cabral.


international semantic web conference | 2003

IRS-II: a framework and infrastructure for semantic web services

Enrico Motta; John Domingue; Liliana Cabral; Mauro Gaspari

In this paper we describe IRS-II (Internet Reasoning Service) a framework and implemented infrastructure, whose main goal is to support the publication, location, composition and execution of heterogeneous web services, augmented with semantic descriptions of their functionalities. IRS-II has three main classes of features which distinguish it from other work on semantic web services. Firstly, it supports one-click publishing of standalone software: IRS-II automatically creates the appropriate wrappers, given pointers to the standalone code. Secondly, it explicitly distinguishes between tasks (what to do) and methods (how to achieve tasks) and as a result supports capability-driven service invocation; flexible mappings between services and problem specifications; and dynamic, knowledge-based service selection. Finally, IRS-II services are web service compatible - standard web services can be trivially published through the IRS-II and any IRS-II service automatically appears as a standard web service to other web service infrastructures. In the paper we illustrate the main functionalities of IRS-II through a scenario involving a distributed application in the healthcare domain.


Lecture Notes in Computer Science | 2004

Approaches to semantic web services: An overview and comparisons

Liliana Cabral; John Domingue; Enrico Motta; Terry R. Payne; Farshad Hakimpour

The next Web generation promises to deliver Semantic Web Services (SWS); services that are self-described and amenable to automated discovery, composition and invocation. A prerequisite to this, however, is the emergence and evolution of the Semantic Web, which provides the infrastructure for the semantic interoperability of Web Services. Web Services will be augmented with rich formal descriptions of their capabilities, such that they can be utilized by applications or other services without human assistance or highly con-strained agreements on interfaces or protocols. Thus, Semantic Web Services have the potential to change the way knowledge and business services are consumed and provided on the Web. In this paper, we survey the state of the art of current enabling technologies for Semantic Web Services. In addition, we characterize the infrastructure of Semantic Web Services along three orthogonal dimensions: activities, architecture and service ontology. Further, we examine and contrast three current approaches to SWS according to the proposed dimensions.


Journal of Web Semantics | 2008

IRS-III: A broker-based approach to semantic Web services

John Domingue; Liliana Cabral; Stefania Galizia; Vlad Tanasescu; Alessio Gugliotta; Barry Norton; Carlos Pedrinaci

A factor limiting the take up of Web services is that all tasks associated with the creation of an application, for example, finding, composing, and resolving mismatches between Web services have to be carried out by a software developer. Semantic Web services is a combination of semantic Web and Web service technologies that promise to alleviate these problems. In this paper we describe IRS-III, a framework for creating and executing semantic Web services, which takes a semantic broker-based approach to mediating between service requesters and service providers. We describe the overall approach and the components of IRS-III from an ontological and architectural viewpoint. We then illustrate our approach through an application in the eGovernment domain.


international conference on move to meaningful internet systems | 2007

An outlook on semantic business process mining and monitoring

A. K. Alves de Medeiros; Carlos Pedrinaci; W.M.P. van der Aalst; John Domingue; Minseok Song; A Anne Rozinat; Barry Norton; Liliana Cabral

Semantic Business Process Management (SBPM) has been proposed as an extension of BPM with Semantic Web and Semantic Web Services (SWS) technologies in order to increase and enhance the level of automation that can be achieved within the BPM life-cycle. In a nutshell, SBPM is based on the extensive and exhaustive conceptualization of the BPM domain so as to support reasoning during business processes modelling, composition, execution, and analysis, leading to important enhancements throughout the life-cycle of business processes. An important step of the BPM life-cycle is the analysis of the processes deployed in companies. This analysis provides feedback about how these processes are actually being executed (like common control-flow paths, performance measures, detection of bottlenecks, alert to approaching deadlines, auditing, etc). The use of semantic information can lead to dramatic enhancements in the state-of-the-art in analysis techniques. In this paper we present an outlook on the opportunities and challenges on semantic business process mining and monitoring, thus paving the way for the implementation of the next generation of BPM analysis tools.


international semantic web conference | 2006

IRS-III: a broker for semantic web services based applications

Liliana Cabral; John Domingue; Stefania Galizia; Alessio Gugliotta; Vlad Tanasescu; Carlos Pedrinaci; Barry Norton

In this paper we describe IRS-III which takes a semantic broker based approach to creating applications from Semantic Web Services by mediating between a service requester and one or more service providers. Business organisations can view Semantic Web Services as the basic mechanism for integrating data and processes across applications on the Web. This paper extends previous publications on IRS by providing an overall description of our framework from the point of view of application development. More specifically, we describe the IRS-III methodology for building applications using Semantic Web Services and illustrate our approach through a use case on e-government.


business process management | 2009

The business process modelling ontology

Liliana Cabral; Barry Norton; John Domingue

In this paper we describe the Business Process Modelling Ontology (BPMO), which is part of an approach to modelling business processes at the semantic level, integrating knowledge about the organisational context, workflow activities and Semantic Web Services. We harness knowledge representation and reasoning techniques so that business process workflows can: be exposed and shared through semantic descriptions; refer to semantically annotated data and services; incorporate heterogeneous data though semantic mappings; and be queried using a reasoner or inference engine. In this paper we describe our approach and evaluate BPMO through a use case.


congress on evolutionary computation | 2005

Semantic Web service composition in IRS-III: the structured approach

Farshad Hakimpour; Denilson Sell; Liliana Cabral; John Domingue; Enrico Motta

Semantic Web services facilitate activities including automatic discovery and composition of Web services. Research initiatives such as WSMO have been developing specifications for this technology. This paper describes a model for composition of Web services. The proposed model complements the WSMO orchestration in IRS-III, a framework for semantic Web services based on WSMO specification. We present a tool based on the above model that supports a user-guided interactive composition approach, by recommending component Web services according to the composition context.


international semantic web conference | 2005

Choreography in IRS-III – coping with heterogeneous interaction patterns in web services

John Domingue; Stefania Galizia; Liliana Cabral

In this paper we describe how we handle heterogeneity in web service interaction through a choreography mechanism that we have developed for IRS-III. IRS-III is a framework and platform for developing semantic web services which utilizes the WSMO ontology. The overall design of our choreography framework is based on: the use of ontologies and state, IRS-III playing the role of a broker, differentiating between communication direction and which actor has the initiative, having representations which can be executed, a formal semantics, and the ability to suspend communication. Our framework has a full implementation which we illustrate through an example application.


database and expert systems applications | 2005

Adding Semantics to Business Intelligence

Denilson Sell; Liliana Cabral; Enrico Motta; John Domingue; Roberto Carlos dos Santos Pacheco

Despite the importance of analytical tools to organisations, they still lack the inference power needed to solve the requests of decision makers in a flexible way. Our approach aims at integrating business semantics into analytical tools by providing semantic descriptions of exploratory functionalities and available services. We propose an architecture for business intelligence, which uses semantic Web technology based on IRS-III. In addition, we present OntoDSS, a prototype tool based on this architecture that illustrates some of the functionalities that may be provided to decision makers within an application scenario


Journal on Data Semantics | 2008

Deploying semantic web services-based applications in the e-government domain

Alessio Gugliotta; John Domingue; Liliana Cabral; Vlad Tanasescu; Stefania Galizia; Rob Davies; Leticia Gutiérrez Villarías; Mary Rowlatt; Marc Richardson; Sandra Stinčić

Joining up services in e-Government usually implies governmental agencies acting in concert without a central control regime. This requires to the sharing scattered and heterogeneous data. Semantic Web Service (SWS) technology can help to integrate, mediate and reason between these datasets. However, since a few real-world applications have been developed, it is still unclear which are the actual benefits and issues of adopting such a technology in the e-Government domain. In this paper, we contribute to raising awareness of the potential benefits in the e-Government community by analyzing motivations, requirements and expected results, before proposing a reusable SWS-based framework. We demonstrate the application of this framework by showing how integration and interoperability emerge from this model through a cooperative and multi-viewpoint methodology. Finally, we illustrate added values and lessons learned by two compelling case studies: a change of circumstances notification system and a GIS-based emergency planning system, and describe key challenges which remain to be addressed.

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