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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV044323525
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 377 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781609601287
    Series Statement: Premier reference source
    Content: "This book investigates the application of semantic technologies to business and information systems engineering. This reference work assists the reader in gaining knowledge on applying semantic technologies for advanced business information systems, in annotating semantics to business processes, and in semantically integrating advanced business information systems." - Provided by publisher
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , 1. Ontologies and controlled vocabulary: comparison of building methodologies / Daniela Lucas da Silva, Renato Rocha Souza and Maur icio Barcellos Almeida -- 2. An ontology-based method to construct a reference model catalogue for the energy sector / Jos e M. Gonz alez and Mathias Uslar -- 3. Ontological evaluation of Scheer's reference model for production planning and control systems / Peter Fettke and Peter Loos -- 4. Heterogeneous text and numerical data mining with possible applications in business and financial sectors / Farid Bourennani and Shahryar Rahnamayan -- 5. Semantic integration of structured and unstructured data in data warehousing and knowledge management systems / Liane Haak -- 6. Enhancing the personal knowledge management with semantic desktop technologies: SCAN approach / Alexey V. Alishevskikh and Tatiana V. Emshanova -- , - 7. Supporting conceptual model analysis using semantic standardization and structural pattern matching / Patrick Delfmann, Lukasz Lis and J org Becker -- 8. Semantic verification of business process models: prospects and limitations / Michael Fellmann, Oliver Thomas and Frank Hogrebe -- 9. Automated planning of process models: towards a semantic-based approach / Bernd Heinrich, Mathias Klier and Steffen Zimmermann -- 10. Stepwise semantic enrichment in health-related public management by using semantic information models / Hans-Georg Fill and Ilona Reischl -- 11. EPCs annotated with lexical and semantic labels to bridge the gap between human understandability and machine interpretability / Andreas B ogl, Michael Karlinger, Michael Schrefl and Gustav Pomberger -- 12. Semantic annotation of business process templates / Yun Lin and Darijus Strasunskas -- , - 13. Semantically enhanced business process modeling notation / Witold Abramowicz, Agata Filipowska, Monika Kaczmarek and Tomasz Kaczmarek -- 14. Functional components specification in the semantic SOA-based model / Tariq Mahmoud, Jorge Marx G omez and Timo von der Dovenm uhle -- 15. Semantic-enabled compliance management / Rainer Telesko and Simon Nikles -- 16. Semantic policies for modeling regulatory process compliance / Marwane El Kharbili and Elke Pulvermueller -- 17. A broader view on context models towards supporting business process agility / Barbara Th onssen and Daniela Wolff
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-60960-126-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 1-60960-126-2
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Author information: Teuteberg, Frank 1970-
    Author information: Thomas, Oliver 1971-
    Author information: Smolnik, Stefan
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam/Philadelphia :John Benjamins Publishing Company,
    UID:
    almahu_9949615170102882
    Format: 1 online resource (286 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 90-272-4930-X
    Series Statement: Constructional Approaches to Language Series ; v.37
    Content: The volume showcases the vibrant research activity within part of the construction grammar community dealing with Nordic languages, contributing to the knowledge about the structure, use and learning of these languages, as well as to the field of construction grammar as a whole.
    Note: Intro -- Constructional Approaches to Nordic Languages -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- 1. The Nordic languages -- 1.1 History -- 1.2 Syntax -- 1.3 Morphology -- 1.4 Phonology -- 2. Focus areas in Nordic construction grammar -- 2.1 Interactional construction grammar -- 2.2 Diachronic construction grammar -- 2.3 Constructicography -- 2.4 Diasystematic Construction Grammar -- 3. This volume -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 2 Life at the intersection -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The source constructions: mannen and den mannen -- 2.1 mannen: a noun phrase with a suffixed definite article -- 2.2 den mannen: noun phrases with a prenominal determiner -- 3. Theoretical background -- 4. The functions of han mannen -- 4.1 Psychological distance or background deixis? -- 4.2 Explaining psychological distance -- 5. Methodology -- 5.1 Data and data selection -- 5.2 Statistical methods -- 5.3 The tested predictor variables -- Int -- N -- Premod -- Poss -- Rc -- Speaker -- 6. Sequential relations: results -- 6.1 Comparing mannen and den mannen -- 6.2 Comparing mannen and han mannen -- 6.3 Comparing den mannen and han mannen -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. The lexemes that occupy the noun slot -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- Appendix -- Chapter 3 One man's [ɕœtː] is another man's [kʰøð̞] -- 1. Introduction1 -- 2. Previous views on Interscandinavian decoding -- 3. Implicit learning of correspondence rules -- 4. Problems in Danish-Swedish intercommunication -- 5. The theoretical approach -- 6. Analysis: Acquisition of Danish-Swedish sound correspondence constructions -- 6.1 Acquisition of a specific sound correspondence pattern -- 6.2 Acquisition of an abstract sound correspondence pattern -- 7. Discussion -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4 The Devil is in the schema -- 1. Introduction. , 2. Swearing in Swedish: Cultural history, forms, and functions -- 3. A constructional approach to hell: The devil is in the schema -- 3.1 Swearwords and swearing constructions -- 3.2 Taboo-avoiding strategies, radical coercion, and extravagance -- 3.3 Phonological schemas and submorphemic coercion -- 4. Corpus evidence for productive phonological schemas -- 4.1 Preliminary considerations -- 4.2 Schema I: [hel-x] -- 4.3 Schema II: [jä-x-a(r)] -- 4.4 Schema III: [fa-x] -- 4.5 Differences in productivity -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgement -- References -- Chapter 5 Meaning integration in pseudocoordination -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1 PC characteristics -- 2.2 PC subschemas and the paradigm of V1s -- 2.3 Most V1s are fully lexical -- 3. PC is VP coordination -- 3.1 The constructional analysis of coordination -- 3.2 Explaining C1 and C2: The coordinands in PC are VPs -- 3.3 One step up: The VP coordination construction -- 4. Meaning integration in PC -- 4.1 Comparison with serial verb constructions -- 4.2 Facilitation is at the core of PC -- 4.3 Explaining C3 concerning coordinators and focus adverbs -- 4.4 Explaining C4: Fixed coordinand order -- 4.5 Explaining C5 concerning negation and other sentence adverbials -- 4.6 Explaining C6: Identical verb inflections -- 4.7 Explaining C7: Backgrounding and filler-gap asymmetry -- 4.8 Desemanticization and grammaticalization rest on backgrounding -- 5. Concluding discussion -- References -- Chapter 6 Construction grammar in domain-specific discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Constructions and domain-specific language -- 3. Methodology -- 3.1 existential constructions -- 3.2 Corpus -- 3.3 Data analysis -- 4. Text-linguistic and lexicological analysis -- 4.1 Swedish -- 4.1.1 Dominating speech act -- 4.1.2 Main topic -- 4.1.3 Information structure. , 4.1.4 Stylistic and formulative prototypical features -- 4.2 Norwegian -- 4.2.1 Dominating speech act -- 4.2.2 Main topic -- 4.2.3 Information structure -- 4.2.4 Stylistic and formulative prototypical features -- 4.3 Dutch -- 4.3.1 Dominating speech act -- 4.3.2 Main topic -- 4.3.3 Information structure -- 4.3.4 Stylistic and formulative prototypical features -- 4.4 Overview -- 5. Constructional analysis -- 5.1 Swedish -- 5.1.1 Frequency -- 5.1.2 Formal features -- 5.1.3 Argument structure -- 5.2 Norwegian -- 5.2.1 Frequency -- 5.2.2 Formal features -- 5.2.3 Argument structure -- 5.3 Dutch -- 5.3.1 Frequency -- 5.3.2 Formal features -- 5.3.3 Argument structure -- 5.4 Comparison -- 6. Summary -- References -- Chapter 7 The entrenchment of semi-schematic time constructions by German foreign language learners of Swedish -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Usage-based and diasystematic construction grammar -- 2.1 Diasystematic construction grammar and emerging multilingualism -- 2.2 Entrenchment -- 3. Lexical and phrasal decision -- 4. Experimental study of entrenchment -- 4.1 Material and items -- 4.2 Participants -- 4.2.1 Control group (L1) -- 4.2.2 Study group (L2) -- 4.3 Design and procedure -- 4.4 Results -- 4.4.1 Control group (L1) results -- 4.4.2 Experiment group (L2) results -- 5. Comparison with corpus data -- 6. Final discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Sources -- Appendices -- Background questions -- Additional tables -- Chapter 8 Danish verb prefixes and the schematizing transitive prefix construction -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1 The German be-construction -- 2.2 The English be-construction -- 3. The Danish STP construction -- 3.1 Meaning variants and usage patterns -- 3.1.1 (A) Transitive relation with manner-specification -- 3.1.2 (B) Transitive relation with transfer/means-specification. , 3.1.3 (C) Transitive relation with result-specification -- 3.1.4 Meaning variants, usage patterns and productivity -- 4. Corpus analysis -- 5. Summarizing the semantics of the STP construction -- 6. Innovative usage -- 6.1 Transitive relation with manner-specification -- 6.2 Transitive relation with transfer/means-specification -- 6.3 Transitive relation with result-specification -- 7. Concluding remarks -- References -- Appendix 1. The STP be-construction -- Appendix 2. The STP for-construction -- Appendix 3. Transitive relation with manner-specification -- Appendix 4. Transitive relation with transfer/means-specification -- Appendix 5. Transitive relation with result-specification -- Chapter 9 Minimizers as negative reinforcers in Norwegian -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background: Negative constructions and negative reinforcement -- 2.1 The grammaticalization of minimizers as negative reinforcers -- 2.2 Minimizing expressions in Norwegian -- 3. Data and method -- 3.1 Data selection -- 3.2 Collexeme analysis -- 4. Results and analysis -- 4.1 Minimizers, lexical domains and context sensitivity -- 4.2 Morpho-syntactic properties -- 4.2.1 Definiteness -- 4.2.2 Number -- 4.2.3 Syntactic functions -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1 Minimizers and extravagant speech behavior -- 5.2 Coercion with a low degree of lexical persistence -- 5.3 Propagation and grammaticalization of minimizers -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Corpora -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Coussé, Evie Constructional Approaches to Nordic Languages Amsterdam/Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company,c2023 ISBN 9789027214317
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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