Information Modeling for Internet Applications

Patrick van Bommel (editor)

Table of contents Detailed table of contents

 

 

PART I.         Fundamentals of Internet Information Modeling

 

 

Chapter 1. Modeling and Querying Web Data: A Constraint-Based Logic Approach

 

Introduction

Semistructured Data : Data Model and Queries

Constraint Languages for Semistructured Data

Ordering and Path Constraint Extension – Query Relaxation

Case Study: The XML Data Format

Conclusions – Future Work

 

 

Chapter 2. Verifying Web Site Properties using Computational Logic

 

Introduction

An Overview of our Approach to Web Site Synthesis

Enforcing Constraints

Verifying Properties

Future Trends

Conclusions

 

 

Chapter 3. Design and Analysis of Active Hypertext Views on Databases

 

Introduction : Hypertext Views and Database Publishing

Background

Lazy: A Declarative Language to Specify and Implement Hypertext Views

The Design of Hypertext Views

Designing hypertext views with Lazy

The Analysis of hypertext view schemas

Making the Hypertext Views Active

Conclusion

 

 

Chapter 4. An Object-Oriented Hypermedia Reference Model formally specified in UML

 

Introduction

Background

Goals of this Approach 

Using UML for a visual and formal specification

The 0bject-oriented hypermedia reference model

Extending the object-oriented reference model

Future trends

Conclusions

 

 

PART II.        Elaboration of Modeling Techniques

 

 

Chapter 5. Systematic Development of Internet Sites Extending Approaches of Conceptual Modelling

 

Introduction

Background

Site Specification

Conclusion

 

 

Chapter 6. The Webspace Method

 

Introduction

Background

Theory behind the Webspace Method

Webspace system architecture

Conceptual modelling of web-data

Web-object extraction and multimedia indexing

Querying a webspace

Future trends

Discussion

 

 

Chapter 7. Specification of Web applications with ADM-2

 

Introduction

Adm and Penelope

The Araneus methodology

Adm-2

The extended Araneus methodology

Conclusions

 

 

Chapter 8. OO-H Method: Extending UML to Model Web Interfaces

 

Introduction

The object-oriented hypermedia method: a brief introduction

The navigation access diagram

The case of study: A Conference Review System

Use Case Diagrams

Business Class Diagram

Modeling assumptions

Navigation Modeling

PC Chair Navigation Profile

View Refinement: presentation modeling

Discussion

Conclusions and OO-H research directions

 

 

Chapter 9. Ontology Extraction and Conceptual Modeling for Web Information

 

Introduction

Web data extraction versus schema extraction

Web ontology extraction: issues and applications

Webontex appraoch to ontology extraction

Future trends

Conclusion

 

 

Chapter 10. OODM: An Object-Oriented Design Methodology For Development of Web Applications

 

Introduction

Background and related work

Proposed object-oriented development methodology (OODM)

Case study

Conclusions and future directions

 

 

PART III.        Additional Topics

 

 

Chapter 11. Web Application Quality: Supporting Maintenance and Testing

 

Introduction

Incremental / interative development process

Web application modeling

Static analysis and transformation

Testing

Conclusions and future work

 

 

Chapter 12. Modeling Data Intensive Web Sites for Personalization, Integrity and Performance

 

Introduction

Related work

DIWS modeling schema

DIWS modeling schema analysis

Web fragment modeling approach

Performance issues

Integrity-maintenance-expandability

Personalization

Future trends

Conclusions

 

 

Chapter 13. Adaptive Web-based Database Communities

 

Introduction

Related Work

Organizing and Modeling Web-accessible Databases

Advertising and Querying Database Communities

Monitoring and Maintaining Inter-community Relationships

WebFindit Implementation

Conclusion

 

 

Chapter 14. Designing Hypertext and the Web with the Heart and the Mind

 

Brief History of Hypertext and the Web

Continuing Usability Problems with Hypertext and the Web

New Usability Problems surrounding Hypertext and Web Applications

New Approaches to Hypertext and Web Design

Conclusion and Future Work

More details.