Workshop Description

Enhancing business performance in contemporary domains (e.g., e-commerce, and logistics) requires systems whose size and intricacy challenge most of the current software engineering methods and tools. From early stages in the development of enterprise computing systems to their maintenance and evolution, a wide spectrum of methodologies, models, languages, tools and platforms are adopted.

Shifting intellectual property and business logic from source code into models allows organizations to focus on the essential aspects of their systems, which have traditionally been blurred by the usage of standard programming languages and underlying technologies. Model-Driven Engineering (MDE) considers models as first-class entities enabling new possibilities for creating, analyzing, and manipulating systems through various types of tools and languages. Each model usually addresses one concern, and the transformations between models provide a chain that enables the automated implementation of a system initiating from its corresponding models.

Scope

This workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners to share experiences in using modelling as a universal paradigm that assists crosscutting methodologies and techniques to interoperate in a more general setting. The workshop intends to address questions about the nature and features of those models and domain-specific metamodels required to capture and measure particular aspects of enterprise computing (e,g., performance, distribution, security, load-balancing, and dependability) and specific business/application domains. Emphasis will be devoted to modelling enterprise legacy systems for integration and evolution, definition of (interoperable) enterprise model repositories, specification of model operations (composition, merging, and difference), model transformation and megamodelling, and the definition of development methodologies that allow all of the benefits of modelling to be realized.

Topics

This workshop focuses on the scientific and practical aspects related with the adoption of MDE for supporting enterprise system engineering and modelling. Thus, we encourage submissions from both academia and industry about the following (non-exhaustive) list of topics:

Important Dates

Contact Information

All inquires about the workshop program should be sent to the workshop co-chairs Jean Bézivin, Jeff Gray, and Alfonso Pierantonio (iwmec2006@model-transformation.org).

Camera Ready Deadline
18 August 2006
Chairs

Alfonso Pierantonio
University of L’Aquila (I)

Jean Bézivin
University of Nantes (F)

Jeff Gray
University of Alabama at Birmingham (USA)


Program Committee

Ana Moreira
Universidade Nova de Lisboa (P)

Anneke Kleppe
University of Twente (NL)

Arne Berre
Sintef (N)

Brandon Eames
Utah State University (USA)

Daniel Varro
University of Budapest (H)

David Frankel
SAP (USA)

Dirk Weise
Interactive Objects (D)

Dominik Stein
University of Essen (D)

Eelco Visser
Universiteit Utrecht (NL)

Gerti Kappel
Technical University of Vienna (A)

Laurence Tratt
King's College (UK)

Marten van Sinderen
University of Twente

Martin Gogolla
University of Bremen (D)

Nora Koch
University of Munich (D)

Pavel Hruby
Microsoft Business Solutions (DK)

Raúl Romero
University of Córdoba (E)

Reiko Heckel
University of Leicester (UK)