Auflistung nach Schlagwort "Reusability"
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- KonferenzbeitragAdvancing Virtual Coaching in Healthcare: Towards A Unified Terminology and Reference Model(Modellierung 2024, 2024) Gißke, Carola; Weiman, Thure Georg; Schlieter, HannesVirtual coaching applications, designed to facilitate behavior change through adaptive coaching activities, hold promise for personalized interventions, particularly in healthcare. While existing literature explores various aspects of virtual coaches (VCs), there is a lack of comprehensive conceptual analysis, and inconsistent terminology further complicates their understanding. The present paper aims to demonstrate the ongoing work on systematically categorizing and describing the components of VCs and, thereby, creating a reference model reusable for different contexts. Based on a systematic literature review, concepts related to VC interventions will be derived, categorized, and linked to each other, forming a unified framework that could simplify the process of designing VCs and provide the foundation for dedicated building tools in terms of low/no-code platforms. Moreover, the work contributes with a consolidated terminology, and the proposed model may also be used to identify underexplored research areas, enhancing research opportunities in the field.
- ZeitschriftenartikelMulti-Level Modeling with Openflexo/FML(Enterprise Modelling and Information Systems Architectures (EMISAJ) – International Journal of Conceptual Modeling: Vol. 15, Nr. 9, 2022) Sylvain Guérin, Joel ChampeauModel federation is a multi-model management approach based on the use of virtual models and loosely coupled links. The models in a federation remain autonomous and represented in their original technological spaces whereas virtual models and links (which are not level bounded) serve as control components used to present different views to the users and maintain synchronization. In this paper we tackle the EMISAJ multi-level process modeling challenge, which consists in providing a solution to the problem of specifying and enacting processes. Solutions must fulfill a number of requirements for a process representation defined at an abstract process-definition level and at various more concrete domain-specific levels, resulting in a multi-level hierarchy of related models. We present a solution based on model federation and discuss the advantages and limitations of using this approach for multi-level modeling. Concretely, we use virtual models and more precisely the Federation Modeling Language (FML) that serves to describe them as the main building block in order to solve the process modeling challenge whereas the federation feature is used as a means to provide editing tools for the resulting process language. Our solution fulfills all the challenge requirements and is fully implemented with the Openflexo framework.