scholarly journals UML2Merge: a UML extension for model merging

IET Software ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 575-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kleinner Farias ◽  
Toacy Cavalcante ◽  
Lucian José Gonçales ◽  
Vinicius Bischoff
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Humberto Cortés ◽  
Antonio Navarro

Nowadays, the Unified Modeling Language (UML) is the most successful notation for the design of object-oriented applications. However, plain UML is not enough to characterize the web presentation tier of enterprise applications, including the navigational, structural and role-based access control (RBAC) features present in these applications. In this paper, we present Enterprise Web Application Extension (E-WAE), a lightweight UML extension for the modeling of these elements, which permits the inclusion of multitier, Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) and security design-level patterns in the models. Our approach follows a Model-Driven Development (MDD) approach, which enables the automatic generation of intermediate platform-specific models and automatic code generation for JavaServer Faces (JSF) and Active Server Pages.NET Model-View-Controller (ASP.NET MVC) frameworks. In addition, this generated code can be used as a low-cost mockup for early client validation of the navigational, structural and RBAC features of enterprise applications. E-WAE has been used with different applications. In this paper, we refer to the checkout process in the Amazon website, the delete resources use case in OdAJ2EE, an educational application developed by us, and the US Library of Congress Online Catalog search facility as examples of its applicability.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter D. Kvam ◽  
Jerome R Busemeyer ◽  
Timothy Joseph Pleskac

Contemporary theories of choice posit that decision making is a constructive process in which a decision maker uses information about the choice options to generate support for various decisions and judgments, then uses these decisions and judgments to reduce their uncertainty about their own preferences. Here we examine how these constructive processes unfold by tracking dynamic changes in preference strength. Across two experiments, we observed that mean preference strength oscillated over time and found that eliciting a choice strongly affected the pattern of oscillation. Preferences following choices oscillated between being stronger than those without prior choice (bolstering) and being weaker than those without choice (suppression). An open system model, merging epistemic uncertainty about how a person reacts to options and ontic uncertainty about how their preference is affected by choice, accounts for the oscillations resulting in both bolstering and suppression effects.


Author(s):  
B. Hofreiter ◽  
C. Huemer ◽  
P. Liegl ◽  
R. Schuster ◽  
M. Zapletal

2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
D Maselli ◽  
R D Johnson ◽  
R Szilveszter Matos ◽  
C Chiappini ◽  
P Camelliti ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The epicardium, the most external layer of the heart, is composed of a layer of epithelial cells and underlying connective tissue. Following myocardial infarction, epicardial cells are activated and provide a source of paracrine factors and progenitor cells. In the border zone of the ischaemic tissue, the activated epicardial cells support cardiac and vascular regeneration by releasing pro-angiogenic and pro-survival factors, and by differentiating towards multiple cell lineages. During this process, activated epicardial cells migrate to the site of injury where they contribute to both post-ischemic remodelling and fibrosis. There is limited knowledge of the cellular and molecular regulation of these processes in large animals and humans, in part due to the lack of robust and representative models. Purpose In this project, we developed an ex vivo 3D organotypic model derived from porcine hearts, amenable to culture, which enables structural, molecular and cellular studies of the epicardium. Methods Thin epicardial/cardiac tissue slices (EpCardio-TS) were obtained by using a vibratome to cut the first layer of tissue from the epicardial side of porcine heart cubes. Slices were cultured for up to 72h in a bioreactor that uses a 3D printed chamber connected to a control system that allows maintenance and adjustment of culture conditions, and ensures continuous media flow. Local intracellular delivery of fluorescent quantum-dots (Qdots) was performed using nanoneedle chips to track epicardial cells, whilst cell fate is visualised in 3D by performing immunofluorescence on decolourised slices. Results Intact EpCardio-TS obtained from porcine heart included a viable epicardium, expressing typical epicardial markers (wt-1, mesothelin, uroplakin), and an electrically active myocardium. Live/dead staining showed epicardial (67.8±16.2%, N=5) and myocardial (40.8±28.6%, N=3) viability, and TUNEL assay confirmed low levels of apoptosis (6.3±5.1% of wt-1+ epicardial cells N=1). Moreover, the presence of proliferating epicardial cells (PCNA+), the increase in wt-1+ cells, and the increase in epicardial gene expression (Tbx18 and TCF21) suggested that cells maintain their progenitor phenotype and undergo activation in culture. Nanoinjection of fluorescent Qdots to EpCardio-TS localized them to the wt-1+ cells on the slice surface, presenting a strategy to mark the epicardial layer. This, combined with the successful decolourisation of the slices, provides an in vitro platform to track the role of epicardial cells in cardiac remodelling and fibrosis. Conclusions EpCardio-TS represents a robust ex vivo model merging the complexity of a 3D organotypic culture with the simplicity of the in vitro culture. EpCardio-TS are amenable to culture and cell tracking, and can therefore find application in toxicology and gene therapy screening for the modulation of epicardial interactions with myocardial and non-myocardial cells of the heart.


Author(s):  
Suet Chun Lee

Software product line (SPL) is a software engineering paradigm for software development. A software product within a product line often has specific functionalities that are not common to all other products within the product line. Those specific functionalities are termed “variant features” in a product line. SPL paradigm involves the modeling of variant features. However, little work in SPL investigates and addresses the modeling of variant features specific to user interface (UI). Unified Modeling Language (UML) is the de facto modeling language for object-oriented software systems. It is known that UML needs better support in modeling UIs. Thus, much research developed UML extensions to improve UML support in modeling UIs. Yet little of this work is related to developing such extensions for modeling UIs for SPLs in which variant features specific to UI modeling must be addressed. This research develops a UML extension -Web User Interface Modeling Language (WUIML) to address these problems. WUIML defines elements for modeling variant features specific to user interfaces for Web-based SPLs. The model elements in WUIML extend from the metaclass and BasicActivity of the UML2.0 metamodel. WUIML integrates the modeling of variant features specific to user interfaces to UML. For example, in a Web-based patient registration software product line, member products targeting British users may use British date format in the user interface, while member products targeting United States users may use United States date format in the user interface. Thus, this is a variant feature for this product line. WUIML defines a model element, XOR, to represent such exclusive or conditions in a product line user interface model. WUIML would reduce SPL engineers’ efforts needed in UI development. To validate the WUIML research outcome, a case study was conducted. The results of this empirical study indicate that modeling UIs for Web-based SPLs using WUIML is more effective and efficient than using standard UML.


IEEE Software ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 64-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keen Ngee Loo ◽  
Sai Peck Lee ◽  
Thiam Kian Chiew

Robotics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andersone

Multi-robot mapping and environment modeling have several advantages that makeit an attractive alternative to the mapping with a single robot: faster exploration, higherfault tolerance, richer data due to different sensors being used by different systems. However,the environment modeling with several robotic systems operating in the same area causes problemsof higher-order—acquired knowledge fusion and synchronization over time, revealing the sameenvironment properties using different sensors with different technical specifications. While theexisting robot map and environment model merging techniques allow merging certain homogeneousmaps, the possibility to use sensors of different physical nature and different mapping algorithms islimited. The resulting maps from robots with different specifications are heterogeneous, and eventhough some research on how to merge fundamentally different maps exists, it is limited to specificapplications. This research reviews the state of the art in homogeneous and heterogeneous mapmerging and illustrates the main research challenges in the area. Six factors are identified thatinfluence the outcome of map merging: (1) robotic platform hardware configurations, (2) maprepresentation types, (3) mapping algorithms, (4) shared information between robots, (5) relativepositioning information, (6) resulting global maps.


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