Service recommendation for individual and process use

Web services have been developed as an attractive paradigm for publishing, discovering and consuming services. They are loosely-coupled applications that can be run alone or be composed to create new value-added services. They can be consumed as individual services which provide a unique interface t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nguyen, Ngoc Chan
Language:ENG
Published: Institut National des Télécommunications 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00789726
http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/78/97/26/PDF/Thesis-Nguyen-Ngoc-Chan.pdf
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spelling ndltd-CCSD-oai-tel.archives-ouvertes.fr-tel-007897262013-11-09T03:20:32Z http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00789726 2012TELE0044 http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/78/97/26/PDF/Thesis-Nguyen-Ngoc-Chan.pdf Service recommendation for individual and process use Nguyen, Ngoc Chan [INFO:INFO_OH] Computer Science/Other Service recommendation Business process design Neighborhood context Query language Process mining Web services have been developed as an attractive paradigm for publishing, discovering and consuming services. They are loosely-coupled applications that can be run alone or be composed to create new value-added services. They can be consumed as individual services which provide a unique interface to receive inputs and return outputs; or they can be consumed as components to be integrated into business processes. We call the first consumption case individual use and the second case business process use. The requirement of specific tools to assist consumers in the two service consumption cases involves many researches in both academics and industry. On the one hand, many service portals and service crawlers have been developed as specific tools to assist users to search and invoke Web services for individual use. However, current approaches take mainly into account explicit knowledge presented by service descriptions. They make recommendations without considering data that reflect user interest and may require additional information from users. On the other hand, some business process mechanisms to search for similar business process models or to use reference models have been developed. These mechanisms are used to assist process analysts to facilitate business process design. However, they are labor-intense, error-prone, time-consuming, and may make business analyst confused. In our work, we aim at facilitating the service consumption for individual use and business process use using recommendation techniques. We target to recommend users services that are close to their interest and to recommend business analysts services that are relevant to an ongoing designed business process. To recommend services for individual use, we take into account the user's usage data which reflect the user's interest. We apply well-known collaborative filtering techniques which are developed for making recommendations. We propose five algorithms and develop a web-based application that allows users to use services. To recommend services for business process use, we take into account the relations between services in business processes. We target to recommend relevant services to selected positions in a business process. We define the neighborhood context of a service. We make recommendations based on the neighborhood context matching. Besides, we develop a query language to allow business analysts to formally express constraints to filter services. We also propose an approach to extract the service's neighborhood context from business process logs. Finally, we develop three applications to validate our approach. We perform experiments on the data collected by our applications and on two large public datasets. Experimental results show that our approach is feasible, accurate and has good performance in real use-cases 2012-12-13 ENG PhD thesis Institut National des Télécommunications
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic [INFO:INFO_OH] Computer Science/Other
Service recommendation
Business process design
Neighborhood context
Query language
Process mining
spellingShingle [INFO:INFO_OH] Computer Science/Other
Service recommendation
Business process design
Neighborhood context
Query language
Process mining
Nguyen, Ngoc Chan
Service recommendation for individual and process use
description Web services have been developed as an attractive paradigm for publishing, discovering and consuming services. They are loosely-coupled applications that can be run alone or be composed to create new value-added services. They can be consumed as individual services which provide a unique interface to receive inputs and return outputs; or they can be consumed as components to be integrated into business processes. We call the first consumption case individual use and the second case business process use. The requirement of specific tools to assist consumers in the two service consumption cases involves many researches in both academics and industry. On the one hand, many service portals and service crawlers have been developed as specific tools to assist users to search and invoke Web services for individual use. However, current approaches take mainly into account explicit knowledge presented by service descriptions. They make recommendations without considering data that reflect user interest and may require additional information from users. On the other hand, some business process mechanisms to search for similar business process models or to use reference models have been developed. These mechanisms are used to assist process analysts to facilitate business process design. However, they are labor-intense, error-prone, time-consuming, and may make business analyst confused. In our work, we aim at facilitating the service consumption for individual use and business process use using recommendation techniques. We target to recommend users services that are close to their interest and to recommend business analysts services that are relevant to an ongoing designed business process. To recommend services for individual use, we take into account the user's usage data which reflect the user's interest. We apply well-known collaborative filtering techniques which are developed for making recommendations. We propose five algorithms and develop a web-based application that allows users to use services. To recommend services for business process use, we take into account the relations between services in business processes. We target to recommend relevant services to selected positions in a business process. We define the neighborhood context of a service. We make recommendations based on the neighborhood context matching. Besides, we develop a query language to allow business analysts to formally express constraints to filter services. We also propose an approach to extract the service's neighborhood context from business process logs. Finally, we develop three applications to validate our approach. We perform experiments on the data collected by our applications and on two large public datasets. Experimental results show that our approach is feasible, accurate and has good performance in real use-cases
author Nguyen, Ngoc Chan
author_facet Nguyen, Ngoc Chan
author_sort Nguyen, Ngoc Chan
title Service recommendation for individual and process use
title_short Service recommendation for individual and process use
title_full Service recommendation for individual and process use
title_fullStr Service recommendation for individual and process use
title_full_unstemmed Service recommendation for individual and process use
title_sort service recommendation for individual and process use
publisher Institut National des Télécommunications
publishDate 2012
url http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00789726
http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/78/97/26/PDF/Thesis-Nguyen-Ngoc-Chan.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT nguyenngocchan servicerecommendationforindividualandprocessuse
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