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Advances in Rule Interchange and Applications

International Symposium, RuleML 2007, Orlando, Florida, October 25-26, 2007, Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2007

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 4824)

Part of the book sub series: Programming and Software Engineering (LNPSE)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: RuleML 2007.

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Table of contents (23 papers)

  1. Invited Papers

  2. Session: Business Process, Policy and IT Service Management and Modeling

  3. Session: Rule Languages and Interchange Standards

  4. Session: Business Rules, Rule Engines and Applications

  5. Session: RuleML-2007 Challenge

  6. Session: Rules, Reasoning, and Ontologies

  7. Session: Reaction Rules and Rule Applications

Other volumes

  1. Advances in Rule Interchange and Applications

Keywords

About this book

The International Symposium on Rule Interchange and Applications (RuleML-2007), collocated in Orlando, Florida, with the Tenth International Business Rules Forum, was the first symposium devoted to work on practical distributed rule technologies and rule-based applications which need language standards for rules operating in the context of modern infrastructures, including the Semantic Web, intelligent multi-agent systems, event-driven architectures, and service-oriented computing applications. The symposium was organized by the RuleML Initiative, financially and technically supported by industrial companies (Top Logic, VIStology, and Inferware) and in cooperation with professional societies (ECCAI, AAAI, ACM, ACM SIGAPP, ACM SIGMIS, ACM SIGART, ACM SIGMOD, IEEE, IEEE Computer TCAAS, IEEE SMCS, BPM-Forum, W3C, OMG, and OASIS). The RuleML Initiative is organized by representatives from academia, industry and government for the advancement of rule technology, providing enhanced usability, scalability and performance. The goal of RuleML (www. ruleml. org) is to develop an open, general, XML-based family of rule languages as intermediaries between various ‘specialized’ rule vendors, applications, industrial and academic research groups, as well as standardization efforts such as OMG’s PRR or W3C’s RIF. A general advantage of using declarative rules is that they can be easily represented in a machine-readable and platform-independent manner, often governed by an XML schema. This fits well into today’s distributed, heterogeneous Web-based system environments. Rules represented in standardized Web formats can be discovered, interchanged and invoked at runtime within and across Web systems, and can be interpreted and executed on any platform.

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