Final Call for Papers
Seventh
CAiSE/IFIP8.1 International Workshop on
Evaluation of
Modeling Methods in Systems Analysis and Design
(EMMSAD-02)
Toronto, Canada
27-28 May, 2002
(held in
conjunction with CAiSE-02)
Submissions due:
2002 March 17
(owing to many requests, the deadline has been
extended to March 17)
Background:
The field of Information Systems Engineering includes numerous
information modeling methods and notations (e.g. DFDs, ER, ORM and UML). Even
with some attempts to standardize (e.g. UML for object-oriented design), new
modeling methods are constantly being introduced, many of which differ only
marginally from existing approaches. The coining of terms such as NAMA (Not
Another Modeling Approach) and YAMA (Yet Another Modeling Approach) serves as a
wake-up call to the community. A systematic evaluation of modeling methods is
needed to understand the strengths and weaknesses of each method and the
appropriate contexts and tasks where each is most suitably applied. This
understanding has important consequences for the use of existing methods and
the design of new methods (e.g. method engineering). Three categories of formal
evaluation techniques may be identified: purely theoretical (e.g. ontological
evaluation), purely empirical (e.g. experimental comparison), and a hybrid of
the two (i.e. theoretical approach with empirical evidence). Though the need
for such studies is well recognized, there is a paucity of such research in the
literature. Evaluation of modeling methods remains a challenge in information
systems engineering. There is a clear need for innovative, effective, and
efficient techniques for such evaluation.
The objective of this workshop is to provide a forum for researchers
and practitioners interested in modeling methods in systems analysis and design
to meet, and exchange research ideas and results. It also provides researchers
an opportunity to present their research papers and experience reports, and to
take part in open discussions. The seventh in a highly successful series of
workshops, EMMSAD-02 is jointly sponsored by the Conference on Advanced
Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE) and the International Federation for
Information Processing Working Group 8.1 (IFIP8.1).
Relevant
Topics:
Relevant topics for this workshop include (but are not limited to)
theoretical and/or empirical evaluations of modeling methods and methodologies
related to:
Of particularly interest are papers that provide a critical evaluation
of modeling methodologies and/or propose enhancements to them, as well as
papers that address issues related to research methodologies, and theoretical
foundations for evaluating modeling methods. Evaluation of modeling methods for
emerging technologies (e.g. web-based applications, enterprise systems,
e-business, mobile information systems) is strongly encouraged. Case studies
and experience reports are also welcome.
Important
dates (2002):
Deadline for papers (received): March
17
Notification of acceptance: April
20
Camera-ready copies: May
6
Workshop: May
27-28
Submission
guidelines:
The workshop accepts two types of submissions: Completed Research and Research-In-Progress. Completed research
papers should include analysis of data and discussion on research findings.
Research-in-progress papers report on research that is well under way with
preliminary results available at the time of the conference. Please use the
following format for your submissions:
Only electronic submissions are accepted. E-mail
your paper as an attachment in Microsoft Word or Adobe PDF format to TerryHa@microsoft.com.
Accepted papers will be published in the workshop
proceedings, which will be available at the workshop. Top papers in the
completed research category will also be considered (after extension and enhancement)
either for chapters in a book to be edited by the conference co-chairs, or for
journal publications.
Workshop
co-chairs:
|
Dr.
Terry Halpin Microsoft
Corporation USA |
Dr.
Keng Siau University
of Nebraska-Lincoln USA |
Dr.
John Krogstie SINTEF
and Norwegian Institute of Science and Technology Norway |
Program
committee:
Akhilesh
Bajaj, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Andreas
L. Opdahl, University of Bergen, Norway
Arne
Sølvberg, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Barbara
Pernici, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Bernard
Tan, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Colette
Rolland, University of Paris 1, France
Daniel
Dajun Zeng, University of Arizona, USA
David
Embley, Brigham Young University, USA
Dinesh
Batra, Florida International University
Ee
Peng Lim, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Fui
Hoon Nah, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Gerard
Wijers, ID Research , The Netherlands
Gordon
Everest, University of Minnesota, USA
Graham
McLeod, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Guttorm
Sindre, University of Trondheim, Norway
Hannu
Kangassalo, University of Tampere, Finland
Jan
Dietz, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Jan
Stage, Aalborg University, Denmark
Jeffrey
Parsons, Memorial University, Canada
Jin
Soo Park, University of Minnesota, USA
John
Krogstie, SINTEF, Norway
Kalle
Lyytinen, Case Western Reserve University
Keng
Siau, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Matti
Rossi, Helsinki School of Economics, Finland
Michel
Leonard, Université de Genève, Switzerland
Peretz
Shoval, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Ramesh
Venkataramen, Indiana University
Richard
Baskerville, Georgia State University, USA
Robert
Chiang, University of Connecticut, USA
Roger
Chiang, University of Cincinnati, USA
Salvatore
T. March, Vanderbilt University
Shirley
Becker, Florida Institute of Technology, USA
Sjaak
Brinkkemper, Baan Company, The Netherlands
Steven
Kelly, MetaCase Consulting
Sudha
Ram, University of Arizona, USA
Terry
Halpin, Microsoft, USA
Veda
Storey, Georgia State University, USA
Yong
Tan, University of Washington, USA
For more
information about the workshop, please contact:
Dr.
Terry Halpin
e-mail:
TerryHa@microsoft.com
fax:
+ 1 425 936 7329
tel:
+1 425 705 9190
For
general information about the CAiSE conference, see http://www.cs.toronto.edu/caise02