Applications of fuzzy logic in bioinformatics [[electronic resource] /] / Dong Xu ... [et al.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
Disciplina |
572.80285 22
570.285 |
Altri autori (Persone) | XuDong |
Collana | Series on advances in bioinformatics and computational biology |
Soggetto topico |
Bioinformatics
Computational biology Fuzzy logic Fuzzy sets |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 1-84816-259-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Foreword; Preface; Contents; 1. Introduction to Bioinformatics; 1.1 What Is Bioinformatics; 1.2 A Brief History of Bioinformatics; 1.3 Scope of Bioinformatics.; 1.4 Major Challenges in Bioinformatics; 1.5 Bioinformatics and Computer Science; 2. Introduction to Fuzzy Set Theory and Fuzzy Logic; 2.1 Where Does Fuzzy Logic Fit in Computational Science?; 2.2 Why Do We Need to Use Fuzziness in Biology?; 2.3 Brief History of the Field.; 2.4 Fuzzy Membership Functions and Operators.; 2.4.1 Membership functions; 2.4.2 Basic fuzzy set operators.; 2.4.3 Compensatory operators.
2.5 Fuzzy Relations and Fuzzy Logic Inference.2.6 Fuzzy Clustering; 2.6.1 Fuzzy C-Means; 2.6.2 Extension to fuzzy C-Means.; 2.6.3 Possibilistic C-Means (PCM); 2.7 Fuzzy K-Nearest Neighbors; 2.8 Fuzzy Measures and Fuzzy Integrals.; 2.8.1 Fuzzy measures.; 2.8.2 Fuzzy integrals; 2.9 Summary and Final Thoughts; 3. Fuzzy Similarities in Ontologies.; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Definition of Ontology-Based Similarity; 3.3 Set-Based Similarity Measure.; 3.3.1 Pair-wise aggregation.; 3.3.2 Bag of words similarities.; 3.4 Fuzzy Measure Similarity 3.5 Fuzzy Measure Similarity for Augmented Sets of Ontology Objects.3.6 Choquet Fuzzy Integral Similarity Measure.; 3.7 Examples and Applications of Fuzzy Measure Similarity Using GO Terms; 3.7.1 Lymphoma case study; 3.7.2 Gene clustering using Gene Ontology annotations.; 3.7.3 Gene summarization using Gene Ontology terms.; 3.8 Ontology Similarity in Data Mining; 3.9 Discussion and Summary.; 4. Fuzzy Logic in Structural Bioinformatics; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Protein Secondary Structure Prediction.; 4.3 Protein Solvent Accessibility Prediction. 4.4 Protein Structure Matching Using Fuzzy Alignments 4.5 Protein Similarity Calculation Using Fuzzy Contact Maps; 4.6 Protein Structure Class Classification; 4.7 Summary.; 5. Application of Fuzzy Logic in Microarray Data Analyses.; 5.1 Introduction; 5.1.1 Microarray data description; 5.1.2 Microarray processing algorithms for gene selection and patient classification.; 5.1.3 Microarray processing algorithms for gene regulatory network discovery; 5.2 Clustering Algorithms; 5.2.1 (Dis)similarity measures for microarray data; 5.2.2 Fuzzy C-means (FCM); 5.2.3 Relational fuzzy C-means 5.2.4 Fuzzy co-clustering algorithms 5.3 Inferring Gene Networks Using Fuzzy Rule Systems; 5.4 Discussion and Summary.; 6. Other Applications.; 6.1 Overview; 6.2 Applications in Biological Sequence Analyses; 6.2.1 Protein sequence comparison; 6.2.2 Application in sequence family classification; 6.2.3 Application in motif identification.; 6.2.4 Application in protein subcellular localization prediction.; 6.2.5 Genomic structure prediction; 6.3 Application in Computational Proteomics; 6.3.1 Electrophoresis analysis.; 6.3.2 Protein identification through mass-spec; 6.4 Application in Drug Design. 6.5 Discussion and Summary. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910455030403321 |
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Applications of fuzzy logic in bioinformatics [[electronic resource] /] / Dong Xu ... [et al.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
Disciplina |
572.80285 22
570.285 |
Altri autori (Persone) | XuDong |
Collana | Series on advances in bioinformatics and computational biology |
Soggetto topico |
Bioinformatics
Computational biology Fuzzy logic Fuzzy sets |
ISBN | 1-84816-259-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Foreword; Preface; Contents; 1. Introduction to Bioinformatics; 1.1 What Is Bioinformatics; 1.2 A Brief History of Bioinformatics; 1.3 Scope of Bioinformatics.; 1.4 Major Challenges in Bioinformatics; 1.5 Bioinformatics and Computer Science; 2. Introduction to Fuzzy Set Theory and Fuzzy Logic; 2.1 Where Does Fuzzy Logic Fit in Computational Science?; 2.2 Why Do We Need to Use Fuzziness in Biology?; 2.3 Brief History of the Field.; 2.4 Fuzzy Membership Functions and Operators.; 2.4.1 Membership functions; 2.4.2 Basic fuzzy set operators.; 2.4.3 Compensatory operators.
2.5 Fuzzy Relations and Fuzzy Logic Inference.2.6 Fuzzy Clustering; 2.6.1 Fuzzy C-Means; 2.6.2 Extension to fuzzy C-Means.; 2.6.3 Possibilistic C-Means (PCM); 2.7 Fuzzy K-Nearest Neighbors; 2.8 Fuzzy Measures and Fuzzy Integrals.; 2.8.1 Fuzzy measures.; 2.8.2 Fuzzy integrals; 2.9 Summary and Final Thoughts; 3. Fuzzy Similarities in Ontologies.; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Definition of Ontology-Based Similarity; 3.3 Set-Based Similarity Measure.; 3.3.1 Pair-wise aggregation.; 3.3.2 Bag of words similarities.; 3.4 Fuzzy Measure Similarity 3.5 Fuzzy Measure Similarity for Augmented Sets of Ontology Objects.3.6 Choquet Fuzzy Integral Similarity Measure.; 3.7 Examples and Applications of Fuzzy Measure Similarity Using GO Terms; 3.7.1 Lymphoma case study; 3.7.2 Gene clustering using Gene Ontology annotations.; 3.7.3 Gene summarization using Gene Ontology terms.; 3.8 Ontology Similarity in Data Mining; 3.9 Discussion and Summary.; 4. Fuzzy Logic in Structural Bioinformatics; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Protein Secondary Structure Prediction.; 4.3 Protein Solvent Accessibility Prediction. 4.4 Protein Structure Matching Using Fuzzy Alignments 4.5 Protein Similarity Calculation Using Fuzzy Contact Maps; 4.6 Protein Structure Class Classification; 4.7 Summary.; 5. Application of Fuzzy Logic in Microarray Data Analyses.; 5.1 Introduction; 5.1.1 Microarray data description; 5.1.2 Microarray processing algorithms for gene selection and patient classification.; 5.1.3 Microarray processing algorithms for gene regulatory network discovery; 5.2 Clustering Algorithms; 5.2.1 (Dis)similarity measures for microarray data; 5.2.2 Fuzzy C-means (FCM); 5.2.3 Relational fuzzy C-means 5.2.4 Fuzzy co-clustering algorithms 5.3 Inferring Gene Networks Using Fuzzy Rule Systems; 5.4 Discussion and Summary.; 6. Other Applications.; 6.1 Overview; 6.2 Applications in Biological Sequence Analyses; 6.2.1 Protein sequence comparison; 6.2.2 Application in sequence family classification; 6.2.3 Application in motif identification.; 6.2.4 Application in protein subcellular localization prediction.; 6.2.5 Genomic structure prediction; 6.3 Application in Computational Proteomics; 6.3.1 Electrophoresis analysis.; 6.3.2 Protein identification through mass-spec; 6.4 Application in Drug Design. 6.5 Discussion and Summary. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910778068703321 |
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Applications of fuzzy logic in bioinformatics [[electronic resource] /] / Dong Xu ... [et al.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
Disciplina |
572.80285 22
570.285 |
Altri autori (Persone) | XuDong |
Collana | Series on advances in bioinformatics and computational biology |
Soggetto topico |
Bioinformatics
Computational biology Fuzzy logic Fuzzy sets |
ISBN | 1-84816-259-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Foreword; Preface; Contents; 1. Introduction to Bioinformatics; 1.1 What Is Bioinformatics; 1.2 A Brief History of Bioinformatics; 1.3 Scope of Bioinformatics.; 1.4 Major Challenges in Bioinformatics; 1.5 Bioinformatics and Computer Science; 2. Introduction to Fuzzy Set Theory and Fuzzy Logic; 2.1 Where Does Fuzzy Logic Fit in Computational Science?; 2.2 Why Do We Need to Use Fuzziness in Biology?; 2.3 Brief History of the Field.; 2.4 Fuzzy Membership Functions and Operators.; 2.4.1 Membership functions; 2.4.2 Basic fuzzy set operators.; 2.4.3 Compensatory operators.
2.5 Fuzzy Relations and Fuzzy Logic Inference.2.6 Fuzzy Clustering; 2.6.1 Fuzzy C-Means; 2.6.2 Extension to fuzzy C-Means.; 2.6.3 Possibilistic C-Means (PCM); 2.7 Fuzzy K-Nearest Neighbors; 2.8 Fuzzy Measures and Fuzzy Integrals.; 2.8.1 Fuzzy measures.; 2.8.2 Fuzzy integrals; 2.9 Summary and Final Thoughts; 3. Fuzzy Similarities in Ontologies.; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Definition of Ontology-Based Similarity; 3.3 Set-Based Similarity Measure.; 3.3.1 Pair-wise aggregation.; 3.3.2 Bag of words similarities.; 3.4 Fuzzy Measure Similarity 3.5 Fuzzy Measure Similarity for Augmented Sets of Ontology Objects.3.6 Choquet Fuzzy Integral Similarity Measure.; 3.7 Examples and Applications of Fuzzy Measure Similarity Using GO Terms; 3.7.1 Lymphoma case study; 3.7.2 Gene clustering using Gene Ontology annotations.; 3.7.3 Gene summarization using Gene Ontology terms.; 3.8 Ontology Similarity in Data Mining; 3.9 Discussion and Summary.; 4. Fuzzy Logic in Structural Bioinformatics; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Protein Secondary Structure Prediction.; 4.3 Protein Solvent Accessibility Prediction. 4.4 Protein Structure Matching Using Fuzzy Alignments 4.5 Protein Similarity Calculation Using Fuzzy Contact Maps; 4.6 Protein Structure Class Classification; 4.7 Summary.; 5. Application of Fuzzy Logic in Microarray Data Analyses.; 5.1 Introduction; 5.1.1 Microarray data description; 5.1.2 Microarray processing algorithms for gene selection and patient classification.; 5.1.3 Microarray processing algorithms for gene regulatory network discovery; 5.2 Clustering Algorithms; 5.2.1 (Dis)similarity measures for microarray data; 5.2.2 Fuzzy C-means (FCM); 5.2.3 Relational fuzzy C-means 5.2.4 Fuzzy co-clustering algorithms 5.3 Inferring Gene Networks Using Fuzzy Rule Systems; 5.4 Discussion and Summary.; 6. Other Applications.; 6.1 Overview; 6.2 Applications in Biological Sequence Analyses; 6.2.1 Protein sequence comparison; 6.2.2 Application in sequence family classification; 6.2.3 Application in motif identification.; 6.2.4 Application in protein subcellular localization prediction.; 6.2.5 Genomic structure prediction; 6.3 Application in Computational Proteomics; 6.3.1 Electrophoresis analysis.; 6.3.2 Protein identification through mass-spec; 6.4 Application in Drug Design. 6.5 Discussion and Summary. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910815589003321 |
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
B2B integration [[electronic resource] ] : a practical guide to collaborative e-commerce / / Gunjan Samtani ; editors, Marcus Healey & Shyam Samtani |
Autore | Samtani Gunjan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (589 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.8/72/02855 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HealeyMarcus
SamtaniShyam |
Soggetto topico |
Electronic commerce
Application software - Development Business enterprises - Data processing |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 1-86094-957-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
pt. I. The big picture. ch. 1. Introduction. 1.1. Evolution of next generation enterprises. 1.2. New rules of engagement. 1.3. B2B e-commerce. 1.4. B2B integration (B2Bi). 1.5. What is the return on investment (ROI) on B2Bi? 1.6. Conclusion -- ch. 2. Components, benefits, challenges and applications of B2B integration. 2.1. The word is out. 2.2. B2Bi components. 2.3. Benefits of B2B integration. 2.4. B2Bi challenges. 2.5. B2Bi-enabled applications. 2.6. Conclusion -- pt. II. Established integration components. ch. 3. Integration patterns. 3.1. Types of integration. 3.2. Data oriented B2B integration. 3.3. Portal oriented integration. 3.4. Application oriented integration. 3.5. Business process integration (BPI). 3.6. Which approach to use for your B2Bi implementation? 3.7. Conclusion -- ch. 4. Enterprise Application Integration (EAI). 4.1. Today's enterprise. 4.2. What is EAI? 4.3. Where did things go wrong? 4.4. Benefits of EAI. 4.5. Types of EAI. 4.6. Types of enterprise systems. 4.7. Leading EAI solutions. 4.8. Convergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.9. Divergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.10. Conclusion -- ch. 5. Business process management (BPM). 5.1. Existence of 'organization silos'. 5.2. Fundamentals of BPM. 5.3. BPM systems. 5.4. Universal language for BPM. 5.5. Standard business processes. 5.6. Conclusion -- ch. 6. Extensible markup language (XML). 6.1. The need for a universal language. 6.2. What is electronic data interchange (EDI)? 6.3. What's wrong with the first language of the Internet - HTML? 6.4. XML: the universal language of data interchange. 6.5. XSL - extensible stylesheet language. 6.6. Coexistence of XML and EDI. 6.7. Conclusion -- ch. 7. XML Standards for E-business. 7.1. Standards imperative for B2B application integration. 7.2. RosettaNet's solution. 7.3. FpML - financial products markup language. 7.4. Commerce XML (cXML). 7.5. Electronic business XML (ebXML). 7.6. Simple object access protocol (SOAP). 7.7. BizTalk framework. 7.8. Conclusion -- ch. 8. Middleware technologies. 8.1. What is middleware? 8.2. Transaction processing (TP) monitors. 8.3. Message oriented middleware (MOM). 8.4. Distributed objects and components. 8.5. Conclusion -- ch. 9. Integration brokers. 9.1. Introduction. 9.2. Architecture of integration brokers. 9.3. Components of integration brokers. 9.4. Services of integration brokers. 9.5. Selecting an integration broker for your company. 9.6. Leading integration brokers. 9.7. Conclusion -- ch. 10. Internet security. 10.1. Internet security (e-security) critical for B2Bi. 10.2. B2Bi - makes a company highly vulnerable to security risks. 10.3. Employees and other insiders pose the biggest threat. 10.4. E-security strategy. 10.5. Basic security services in B2Bi. 10.6. Key concepts in e-security solutions. 10.7. Shielding an organization from the outside world. 10.8. B2Bi and e-security. 10.9. Secure payments over the internet. 10.10. Security trends for the future. 10.11. Conclusion.
pt. III. Evolving integration components. ch. 11. Web services. 11.1. Service oriented architecture (SOA). 11.2. What are Web services? 11.3. Essential features of a Web services environment. 11.4. Universal description, discovery and integration (UDDI). 11.5. Web services description language (WSDL). 11.6. Web services flow language (WSFL). 11.7. Putting everything together. 11.8. Essential features of a Web services framework. 11.9. Security requirements for Web services. 11.10. Where to start? 11.11. Web services networks. 11.12. Conclusion -- ch. 12. Wireless technologies. 12.1. Introduction. 12.2. The wireless Internet today. 12.3. Wireless application architecture and components. 12.4. Wireless security issues. 12.5. B2B wireless applications. 12.6. Enterprise integration issues for m-commerce. 12.7. Leading m-commerce solution providers. 12.8. To be or not to be... wireless: pertinent strategic considerations. 12.9. Conclusion -- ch. 13. Software agents. 13.1. Software agents enabling the formation of virtual organizations. 13.2. What are intelligent software agents? 13.3. What are agent systems? 13.4. Agent classification. 13.5. Agents and autonomy. 13.6. Multi-agent environment. 13.7. Agents and negotiation. 13.8. Agents and mobility. 13.9. Agents' role in B2B e-commerce and B2Bi. 13.10. Need for a universal language. 13.11. Conclusion -- pt. IV. B2Bi-enabled applications. ch. 14. Supply chain management (SCM). 14.1. Introduction. 14.2. Fundamentals of supply chain management. 14.3. Legacy supply chain. 14.4. B2Bi-enabled supply chain. 14.5. Supply chain planning and execution. 14.6. SCM challenges. 14.7. SCM techniques. 14.8. SCM systems. 14.9. Conclusion -- ch. 15. E-marketplaces and collaborative networks. 15.1. What are e-marketplaces? 15.2. Basics of B2B e-marketplaces. 15.3. How e-marketplaces fit into a company's B2Bi plans. 15.4. Emergence of B2B collaborative networks. 15.5. Conclusion -- pt. V. Conclusion. ch. 16. B2B to P2P evolution. 16.1. Why peer-to-peer? 16.2. Leading P2P protocols. 16.3. Examples of P2P applications. 16.4. Benefits of P2P-based applications in B2B integration. 16.5. But the road is winding. 16.6. Conclusion. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910451297303321 |
Samtani Gunjan
![]() |
||
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
B2B integration [[electronic resource] ] : a practical guide to collaborative e-commerce / / Gunjan Samtani ; editors, Marcus Healey & Shyam Samtani |
Autore | Samtani Gunjan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (589 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.8/72/02855 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HealeyMarcus
SamtaniShyam |
Soggetto topico |
Electronic commerce
Application software - Development Business enterprises - Data processing |
ISBN | 1-86094-957-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
pt. I. The big picture. ch. 1. Introduction. 1.1. Evolution of next generation enterprises. 1.2. New rules of engagement. 1.3. B2B e-commerce. 1.4. B2B integration (B2Bi). 1.5. What is the return on investment (ROI) on B2Bi? 1.6. Conclusion -- ch. 2. Components, benefits, challenges and applications of B2B integration. 2.1. The word is out. 2.2. B2Bi components. 2.3. Benefits of B2B integration. 2.4. B2Bi challenges. 2.5. B2Bi-enabled applications. 2.6. Conclusion -- pt. II. Established integration components. ch. 3. Integration patterns. 3.1. Types of integration. 3.2. Data oriented B2B integration. 3.3. Portal oriented integration. 3.4. Application oriented integration. 3.5. Business process integration (BPI). 3.6. Which approach to use for your B2Bi implementation? 3.7. Conclusion -- ch. 4. Enterprise Application Integration (EAI). 4.1. Today's enterprise. 4.2. What is EAI? 4.3. Where did things go wrong? 4.4. Benefits of EAI. 4.5. Types of EAI. 4.6. Types of enterprise systems. 4.7. Leading EAI solutions. 4.8. Convergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.9. Divergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.10. Conclusion -- ch. 5. Business process management (BPM). 5.1. Existence of 'organization silos'. 5.2. Fundamentals of BPM. 5.3. BPM systems. 5.4. Universal language for BPM. 5.5. Standard business processes. 5.6. Conclusion -- ch. 6. Extensible markup language (XML). 6.1. The need for a universal language. 6.2. What is electronic data interchange (EDI)? 6.3. What's wrong with the first language of the Internet - HTML? 6.4. XML: the universal language of data interchange. 6.5. XSL - extensible stylesheet language. 6.6. Coexistence of XML and EDI. 6.7. Conclusion -- ch. 7. XML Standards for E-business. 7.1. Standards imperative for B2B application integration. 7.2. RosettaNet's solution. 7.3. FpML - financial products markup language. 7.4. Commerce XML (cXML). 7.5. Electronic business XML (ebXML). 7.6. Simple object access protocol (SOAP). 7.7. BizTalk framework. 7.8. Conclusion -- ch. 8. Middleware technologies. 8.1. What is middleware? 8.2. Transaction processing (TP) monitors. 8.3. Message oriented middleware (MOM). 8.4. Distributed objects and components. 8.5. Conclusion -- ch. 9. Integration brokers. 9.1. Introduction. 9.2. Architecture of integration brokers. 9.3. Components of integration brokers. 9.4. Services of integration brokers. 9.5. Selecting an integration broker for your company. 9.6. Leading integration brokers. 9.7. Conclusion -- ch. 10. Internet security. 10.1. Internet security (e-security) critical for B2Bi. 10.2. B2Bi - makes a company highly vulnerable to security risks. 10.3. Employees and other insiders pose the biggest threat. 10.4. E-security strategy. 10.5. Basic security services in B2Bi. 10.6. Key concepts in e-security solutions. 10.7. Shielding an organization from the outside world. 10.8. B2Bi and e-security. 10.9. Secure payments over the internet. 10.10. Security trends for the future. 10.11. Conclusion.
pt. III. Evolving integration components. ch. 11. Web services. 11.1. Service oriented architecture (SOA). 11.2. What are Web services? 11.3. Essential features of a Web services environment. 11.4. Universal description, discovery and integration (UDDI). 11.5. Web services description language (WSDL). 11.6. Web services flow language (WSFL). 11.7. Putting everything together. 11.8. Essential features of a Web services framework. 11.9. Security requirements for Web services. 11.10. Where to start? 11.11. Web services networks. 11.12. Conclusion -- ch. 12. Wireless technologies. 12.1. Introduction. 12.2. The wireless Internet today. 12.3. Wireless application architecture and components. 12.4. Wireless security issues. 12.5. B2B wireless applications. 12.6. Enterprise integration issues for m-commerce. 12.7. Leading m-commerce solution providers. 12.8. To be or not to be... wireless: pertinent strategic considerations. 12.9. Conclusion -- ch. 13. Software agents. 13.1. Software agents enabling the formation of virtual organizations. 13.2. What are intelligent software agents? 13.3. What are agent systems? 13.4. Agent classification. 13.5. Agents and autonomy. 13.6. Multi-agent environment. 13.7. Agents and negotiation. 13.8. Agents and mobility. 13.9. Agents' role in B2B e-commerce and B2Bi. 13.10. Need for a universal language. 13.11. Conclusion -- pt. IV. B2Bi-enabled applications. ch. 14. Supply chain management (SCM). 14.1. Introduction. 14.2. Fundamentals of supply chain management. 14.3. Legacy supply chain. 14.4. B2Bi-enabled supply chain. 14.5. Supply chain planning and execution. 14.6. SCM challenges. 14.7. SCM techniques. 14.8. SCM systems. 14.9. Conclusion -- ch. 15. E-marketplaces and collaborative networks. 15.1. What are e-marketplaces? 15.2. Basics of B2B e-marketplaces. 15.3. How e-marketplaces fit into a company's B2Bi plans. 15.4. Emergence of B2B collaborative networks. 15.5. Conclusion -- pt. V. Conclusion. ch. 16. B2B to P2P evolution. 16.1. Why peer-to-peer? 16.2. Leading P2P protocols. 16.3. Examples of P2P applications. 16.4. Benefits of P2P-based applications in B2B integration. 16.5. But the road is winding. 16.6. Conclusion. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910777028503321 |
Samtani Gunjan
![]() |
||
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
B2B integration [[electronic resource] ] : a practical guide to collaborative e-commerce / / Gunjan Samtani ; editors, Marcus Healey & Shyam Samtani |
Autore | Samtani Gunjan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (589 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.8/72/02855 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HealeyMarcus
SamtaniShyam |
Soggetto topico |
Electronic commerce
Application software - Development Business enterprises - Data processing |
ISBN | 1-86094-957-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
pt. I. The big picture. ch. 1. Introduction. 1.1. Evolution of next generation enterprises. 1.2. New rules of engagement. 1.3. B2B e-commerce. 1.4. B2B integration (B2Bi). 1.5. What is the return on investment (ROI) on B2Bi? 1.6. Conclusion -- ch. 2. Components, benefits, challenges and applications of B2B integration. 2.1. The word is out. 2.2. B2Bi components. 2.3. Benefits of B2B integration. 2.4. B2Bi challenges. 2.5. B2Bi-enabled applications. 2.6. Conclusion -- pt. II. Established integration components. ch. 3. Integration patterns. 3.1. Types of integration. 3.2. Data oriented B2B integration. 3.3. Portal oriented integration. 3.4. Application oriented integration. 3.5. Business process integration (BPI). 3.6. Which approach to use for your B2Bi implementation? 3.7. Conclusion -- ch. 4. Enterprise Application Integration (EAI). 4.1. Today's enterprise. 4.2. What is EAI? 4.3. Where did things go wrong? 4.4. Benefits of EAI. 4.5. Types of EAI. 4.6. Types of enterprise systems. 4.7. Leading EAI solutions. 4.8. Convergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.9. Divergence of EAI and B2Bi. 4.10. Conclusion -- ch. 5. Business process management (BPM). 5.1. Existence of 'organization silos'. 5.2. Fundamentals of BPM. 5.3. BPM systems. 5.4. Universal language for BPM. 5.5. Standard business processes. 5.6. Conclusion -- ch. 6. Extensible markup language (XML). 6.1. The need for a universal language. 6.2. What is electronic data interchange (EDI)? 6.3. What's wrong with the first language of the Internet - HTML? 6.4. XML: the universal language of data interchange. 6.5. XSL - extensible stylesheet language. 6.6. Coexistence of XML and EDI. 6.7. Conclusion -- ch. 7. XML Standards for E-business. 7.1. Standards imperative for B2B application integration. 7.2. RosettaNet's solution. 7.3. FpML - financial products markup language. 7.4. Commerce XML (cXML). 7.5. Electronic business XML (ebXML). 7.6. Simple object access protocol (SOAP). 7.7. BizTalk framework. 7.8. Conclusion -- ch. 8. Middleware technologies. 8.1. What is middleware? 8.2. Transaction processing (TP) monitors. 8.3. Message oriented middleware (MOM). 8.4. Distributed objects and components. 8.5. Conclusion -- ch. 9. Integration brokers. 9.1. Introduction. 9.2. Architecture of integration brokers. 9.3. Components of integration brokers. 9.4. Services of integration brokers. 9.5. Selecting an integration broker for your company. 9.6. Leading integration brokers. 9.7. Conclusion -- ch. 10. Internet security. 10.1. Internet security (e-security) critical for B2Bi. 10.2. B2Bi - makes a company highly vulnerable to security risks. 10.3. Employees and other insiders pose the biggest threat. 10.4. E-security strategy. 10.5. Basic security services in B2Bi. 10.6. Key concepts in e-security solutions. 10.7. Shielding an organization from the outside world. 10.8. B2Bi and e-security. 10.9. Secure payments over the internet. 10.10. Security trends for the future. 10.11. Conclusion.
pt. III. Evolving integration components. ch. 11. Web services. 11.1. Service oriented architecture (SOA). 11.2. What are Web services? 11.3. Essential features of a Web services environment. 11.4. Universal description, discovery and integration (UDDI). 11.5. Web services description language (WSDL). 11.6. Web services flow language (WSFL). 11.7. Putting everything together. 11.8. Essential features of a Web services framework. 11.9. Security requirements for Web services. 11.10. Where to start? 11.11. Web services networks. 11.12. Conclusion -- ch. 12. Wireless technologies. 12.1. Introduction. 12.2. The wireless Internet today. 12.3. Wireless application architecture and components. 12.4. Wireless security issues. 12.5. B2B wireless applications. 12.6. Enterprise integration issues for m-commerce. 12.7. Leading m-commerce solution providers. 12.8. To be or not to be... wireless: pertinent strategic considerations. 12.9. Conclusion -- ch. 13. Software agents. 13.1. Software agents enabling the formation of virtual organizations. 13.2. What are intelligent software agents? 13.3. What are agent systems? 13.4. Agent classification. 13.5. Agents and autonomy. 13.6. Multi-agent environment. 13.7. Agents and negotiation. 13.8. Agents and mobility. 13.9. Agents' role in B2B e-commerce and B2Bi. 13.10. Need for a universal language. 13.11. Conclusion -- pt. IV. B2Bi-enabled applications. ch. 14. Supply chain management (SCM). 14.1. Introduction. 14.2. Fundamentals of supply chain management. 14.3. Legacy supply chain. 14.4. B2Bi-enabled supply chain. 14.5. Supply chain planning and execution. 14.6. SCM challenges. 14.7. SCM techniques. 14.8. SCM systems. 14.9. Conclusion -- ch. 15. E-marketplaces and collaborative networks. 15.1. What are e-marketplaces? 15.2. Basics of B2B e-marketplaces. 15.3. How e-marketplaces fit into a company's B2Bi plans. 15.4. Emergence of B2B collaborative networks. 15.5. Conclusion -- pt. V. Conclusion. ch. 16. B2B to P2P evolution. 16.1. Why peer-to-peer? 16.2. Leading P2P protocols. 16.3. Examples of P2P applications. 16.4. Benefits of P2P-based applications in B2B integration. 16.5. But the road is winding. 16.6. Conclusion. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910807003803321 |
Samtani Gunjan
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London, : Imperial College Press | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Building innovation capability in organizations [[electronic resource] ] : an international cross-case perspective / / by Milé Terziovski |
Autore | Terziovski Milé |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.4/063 |
Collana | Series on technology management |
Soggetto topico |
Technological innovations
International business enterprises New products Electronic commerce Sustainable development |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-281-86954-6
9786611869540 1-86094-999-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Development of an integrated innovation capability model -- Strategic shift from product orientation to innovative solutions capability in the German biotechnology industry: Sartorius AG -- Managing strategic change through mainstream and newstream innovation at Eurocopter France -- Leveraging innovation capabilities at Caterpillar Underground Mining Pty Ltd -- Drivers of innovation capability at Sun Microsystems (SMS) -- Development and exploitation of innovation capability at a Defence Project Engineering Company (DPEC) -- Drivers of innovation capability for effective sustainable development: best practice at Vaisala -- Developing innovation capability through intellectual property strategy in the Australian biotechnology industry: Starpharma -- Development of innovation capability at Invincible Company in Thailand -- Multiple cross-case analysis: conclusions and implications. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910450674203321 |
Terziovski Milé
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London, : Imperial College Press | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Building innovation capability in organizations [[electronic resource] ] : an international cross-case perspective / / by Milé Terziovski |
Autore | Terziovski Milé |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.4/063 |
Collana | Series on technology management |
Soggetto topico |
Technological innovations
International business enterprises New products Electronic commerce Sustainable development |
ISBN |
1-281-86954-6
9786611869540 1-86094-999-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Development of an integrated innovation capability model -- Strategic shift from product orientation to innovative solutions capability in the German biotechnology industry: Sartorius AG -- Managing strategic change through mainstream and newstream innovation at Eurocopter France -- Leveraging innovation capabilities at Caterpillar Underground Mining Pty Ltd -- Drivers of innovation capability at Sun Microsystems (SMS) -- Development and exploitation of innovation capability at a Defence Project Engineering Company (DPEC) -- Drivers of innovation capability for effective sustainable development: best practice at Vaisala -- Developing innovation capability through intellectual property strategy in the Australian biotechnology industry: Starpharma -- Development of innovation capability at Invincible Company in Thailand -- Multiple cross-case analysis: conclusions and implications. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910777060803321 |
Terziovski Milé
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||
London, : Imperial College Press | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Building innovation capability in organizations [[electronic resource] ] : an international cross-case perspective / / by Milé Terziovski |
Autore | Terziovski Milé |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.4/063 |
Collana | Series on technology management |
Soggetto topico |
Technological innovations
International business enterprises New products Electronic commerce Sustainable development |
ISBN |
1-281-86954-6
9786611869540 1-86094-999-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | Development of an integrated innovation capability model -- Strategic shift from product orientation to innovative solutions capability in the German biotechnology industry: Sartorius AG -- Managing strategic change through mainstream and newstream innovation at Eurocopter France -- Leveraging innovation capabilities at Caterpillar Underground Mining Pty Ltd -- Drivers of innovation capability at Sun Microsystems (SMS) -- Development and exploitation of innovation capability at a Defence Project Engineering Company (DPEC) -- Drivers of innovation capability for effective sustainable development: best practice at Vaisala -- Developing innovation capability through intellectual property strategy in the Australian biotechnology industry: Starpharma -- Development of innovation capability at Invincible Company in Thailand -- Multiple cross-case analysis: conclusions and implications. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910819000803321 |
Terziovski Milé
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London, : Imperial College Press | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Chapters in the evolution of chromatography [[electronic resource] /] / Leslie S. Ettre ; edited by John V. Hinshaw |
Autore | Ettre Leslie S |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, : Imperial College Press |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (492 p.) |
Disciplina | 543.8 |
Altri autori (Persone) | HinshawJohn V |
Soggetto topico |
Chromatographic analysis - History
Chemistry, Analytic |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-281-86771-3
9786611867713 1-86094-944-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction: One Hundred Years of Chromatography; Steps in the Evolution of Chromatography; References; Part One: THE PRECURSORS OF CHROMATOGRAPHY; 1. Chromatography in the Ancient World; 1.1. Was Moses The First Chromatographer?; 1.2. Did Pliny The Elder Use Planar Chromatography?; References; 2. Friedlieb Ferdinand Runge: "Self-Grown Pictures" as Precursors of Paper Chromatography; 2.1. Runge's Life and Activities; 2.2. Runge's Chemistry Textbooks; 2.3. Investigation of Dyes; 2.4. The Formation of Characteristic Patterns
2.5. Runge's Philosophy Concerning The "Self-Grown Pictures"2.6. The "Od"; 2.7. Runge's "Self-Grown Pictures" and Chromatography; References; 3. Early Petroleum Chromatographers; 3.1. David T. Day; 3.2. Joseph E. Gilpin; 3.3. Carl Engler; 3.4. Other Scientists; 3.4.1. Leo Ubbelohde; 3.4.2. Russian Petroleum Chemists; 3.5. Controversy; 3.6. Chromatography and the Cold War; References; Part Two: M. S. TSWETT AND THE DISCOVERY OF CHROMATOGRAPHY; 4. M. S. Tswett, and the Invention of Chromatography Part I: Life and Early Work (1872-1903); 4.1. The Life of M. S. Tswett; 4.2. Early Investigations 4.3. In Warsaw (1901-1903)References; 5. M. S. Tswett and the Invention of Chromatography Part II: Completion of the Development (1903-1910); 5.1. Controversy; 5.2. Tswett's Two Publications On Chromatography; 5.3. Polemics; 5.4. Tswett's 1910 Book; 5.5. Postwords; References; 6. M. S. Tswett and the 1918 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; 6.1. The Nobel Prizes; 6.2. The Nominations for the 1918 Chemistry Prize; 6.3. Tswett's Nomination; 6.4. Evaluation; References; Part Three: THE FIRST PIONEERS IN THE USE OF CHROMATOGRAPHY; 7. Gottfried Kränzlin, the First Follower of Tswett 7.1. G. Kränzlin and his Work 7.2. Kränzlin's Thesis; 7.3. Chromatography in Kränzlin's Thesis; 7.4. Kränzlin's Place in the Evolution of Chromatography; 7.5. Postscript; References; 8. Charles Dhéré - Pioneer and Tswett Biographer; 8.1. Dhéré's Life; His Field of Interest; 8.2. Rogowski and His Chromatography Work; 8.2.1. Rogowski's Life; 8.2.2. Rogowski's Thesis Work; 8.2.3. Dhéré and Tswett; 8.3. Vegezzi and His Thesis Work; 8.4. Later Work of Dhéré; 8.5. Dhéré's Paper on Tswett; 8.6. Conclusions; References; 9. L. S. Palmer and the Beginnings of Chromatography in the United States 9.1. Palmer's Life 9.2. Palmer's Research Activities; 9.3. Chromatography in Palmer's Work; 9.4. Chromatography in Palmer's Book; 9.5. Palmer as the Transition Between Tswett and The "Rebirth" of Chromatography; References; 10. Katharine Hope Coward: A Pioneering User of Chromatography; 10.1. K. H. Coward - Her Life; 10.2. The State of Science in Coward's Time; 10.2.1. Nutrition and Vitamins; 10.2.2. Carotenoids; 10.3. The Scope of Coward's Work in the 1920's; 10.3.1. Coward and Chromatography; 10.4. Postscript; References; 11. Theodor Lippmaa, A Forgotten Chromatographer 11.1. The Separation of Carotenoids |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910453687403321 |
Ettre Leslie S
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London, : Imperial College Press | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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