Alu Srinivasan, Beginning Finite Mathematics, 2005, McGraw-Hill,
New York. p. 70.
5. Lloyd R. Jaisingh and Frank Ayres, Jr., Abstract Algebra, 2004, McGraw-Hill, New York, p. 6.
154 Ch. 7 Service-Oriented Discovery and Analysis: Implementation Mechanisms
6. Seymour Lipschutz and Marc Lipson, Probability, 2000, McGraw-Hill, New York, p. 16.
7. Ibid.
8. Dieter Fensel, ???Knowledge Acquisition and the Interpretative Paradigm.??? in Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence:
Contemporary Knowledge Engineering and Cognition, 1991, Springer-Verlag, Germany, p. 80.
9. Seymour Lipschutz and Marc Lipson, Probability, 2000, McGraw-Hill, New York, p. 16.
CHAPTER 8
SERVICE-ORIENTED ANALYSIS MODELING
Analysis modeling is analogous to building a miniature replica of a future serviceoriented
implementation. But the service discovery and analysis phase deals with intangible
entities??”analysis services??”that are subject to manipulation, alignment, and analysis operations.
The aim is to inspect the provided business or technological requirements, understand their proposal,
and create a mockup of a future service-oriented landscape??”the analysis proposition. A
model, typically presented by a visual artifact, can provide a sense of how the actual solution
formation will look. Analysis modeling is not overly concerned with the technical implementation
and the detailed integration of services because it is an attempt to meticulously glue all the known
parts together.
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