1,721,191 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076231185475 - Supplemental material for A predictive decision support system for coronavirus disease 2019 response management and medical logistic planning

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076231185475 for A predictive decision support system for coronavirus disease 2019 response management and medical logistic planning by Sofiane Atek, Filippo Bianchini, Corrado De Vito, Vincenzo Cardinale, Simone Novelli, Cristiano Pesaresi, Marco Eugeni, Massimo Mecella, Antonello Rescio, Luca Petronzio, Aldo Vincenzi, Pasquale Pistillo, Gianfranco Giusto, Giorgio Pasquali, Domenico Alvaro, Paolo Villari, Marco Mancini and Paolo Gaudenzi in DIGITAL HEALTH</p

    Work&#64258;ow Enactment in a Social Software Environment

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    Originally conceived with di&#64256;erent goals in mind, both Business Process Management (BPM) tools and social software applications help organizations in enacting multi-actor processes. The paradigms they are inspired to are, however, very di&#64256;erent and this is mostly true if we focus on how coordination among actors is carried on. In a BPM context, usually, the process that has to be enacted is well de&#64257;ned: a model of the process exists and the interactions among actors are enforced by this model. We refer to this approach as structured coordination. Social software, on the other side, fosters the enactment of processes by putting collaboration tools into the hands of the users. In this case we witness to a signi&#64257;cant example of what we call emerging coordination. While a synthesis of the two paradigms is arguably impossible, it is however interesting to study how BPM and social software can bene&#64257;t from each other. In this paper we show how principles of structured coordination can be injected in a social software environment in order to enact simple work&#64258;ows. To this end we introduce Social X-Folders, and extension of X-Folders designed to interact with social software tools

    Towards an IoT model for the assessment of smart devices

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    The current Internet of Things (IoT) market proposes a wide variety of devices with complex design and different functionality. In addition, the same IoT device can be used in different domains, from home to industry, to healthcare. The management of such devices occurs in different ways, for example through visual interaction using high level programming languages (e.g. Event-Condition-Action rules) or through high level API. Generally, end users are not technical experts and are not able to configure their IoT devices, thus they need external tools (or visual interaction paradigm) to exploit and better control them. In this work, we present a model for IoT devices which allows to assess those devices and their suitability for a certain domain according to four dimensions: communication, target, data manipulation and development. The model aims at better understanding the device capabilities and, consequently, facilitating the choice of the devices that better suit the domain in which they should be used

    REMS 2018 Multidisciplinary Symposium on Computer Science and ICT

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    The Multidisciplinary Symposium on ICT Research (REMS 2018) is a symposium dedicated to the exchange of advanced research experiences in the field of Information and Communication Technologies between Russia and western countries under the motto “Integrating Research Agendas and Devising Joint Challenges”. The symposium attracted 97 contributions of which 12 long papers and 27 short papers were accepted for presentation at the symposium. Additionally, it included 4 invited talks given by Andrew Brodnik, Evgeny Nikolaev, Nafisa Yusupova and Giuseppe Santucci. We would like to thank all the authors for their submissions, and our Program Committee and additional reviewers for their precious work. The Multidisciplinary Symposium on ICT Research is held with the financial support of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research, project No. 18-07-20081

    Towards intelligible graph data visualization using circular layout

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    Polar coordinates have been widely used in various techniques of interactive data visualization. The spatial organization through circular and radial layouts is implemented in a wide range of statistical charts and plots and is applicable for space-flling techniques and for node-link-group diagrams. Different arrangements of dots, lines and areas in polar coordinates create grids for data distribution, aggregation and linking. This work is devoted to the study of visual notations of data and their relationships and proposes an outline of their application in designing node-link-group diagrams, in order to arrange the geometric solutions at functional and logical levels of the visual representation

    raffaeleconforti/ResearchCode: TKDE Benchmark

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    &lt;p&gt;This zip contains the benchmark (and its sourcecode) discussed in the publication:&lt;br&gt; Adriano Augusto, Raffaele Conforti, Marlon Dumas, Marcello La Rosa,&nbsp;Fabrizio Maria Maggi, Andrea Marrella, Massimo Mecella, and Allar Soo.&nbsp;&quot;Automated Discovery of Process Models from Event Logs: Review and Benchmark&quot;&nbsp;&lt;/p&gt
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