TY - CHAP A1 - Jacobs, Stephan ED - Bleek, Wolf-Gideon T1 - Towards integration driven design : experience report T2 - Software Engineering 2007 : Beiträge zu den Workshops ; Fachtagung des GI-Fachbereichs Softwaretechnik ; 27. - 30.03.2007 in Hamburg. - (GI-Edition : Proceedings ; 106) Y1 - 2007 SN - 978-3-88579-200-0 SP - 143 EP - 150 PB - Ges. für Informatik CY - Bonn ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Herzwurm, Georg A1 - Pietsch, Wolfram T1 - Introduction of RePriCo’13 T2 - 19th International Working Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality (REFSQ 2013) : proceedings of the REFSQ 2013 Workshops CreaRE, IWSPM, and RePriCo, the REFSQ 2013 Empirical Track (Empirical Live Experiment and Empirical Research Fair), the REFSQ 2013 Doctoral Symposium, and the REFSQ 2013 Poster Session. ICB-research report. No. 56 Y1 - 2013 SN - ISSN 1860-2770 (Print ) ; ISSN 1866-5101 (Online) SP - 103 EP - 105 PB - Duisburg-Essen CY - Univ. ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Herzwurm, Georg A1 - Pietsch, Wolfram T1 - Guidelines for the analysis of IT business models and strategic positioning of IT-products T2 - Second International Workshop on Software Product Management : IWSPM '08 : Barcelona, Catalunya, 09.09.2008 Y1 - 2008 SN - 978-1-4244-4083-2 (Print) ; 978-0-7695-3625-5 (E-Book) U6 - http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/IWSPM.2008.3 SP - 1 EP - 8 PB - IEEE CY - Piscataway, NJ ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Hammer, Andreas A1 - Vieth, Matthias A1 - Maier, Frank T1 - Co-Plot as a new multivariate analysis method for operations management research? T2 - Papers of the 12th International EurOMA Conference on Operational and Global Competitiveness, Budapest, Hungary, June 19-22, 2005 / Editor: Krisztina Demeter Y1 - 2005 SN - 963-218-455-6 SP - 1007 EP - 1016 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Freyer, Nils A1 - Thewes, Dustin A1 - Meinecke, Matthias ED - Gusikhin, Oleg ED - Hammoudi, Slimane ED - Cuzzocrea, Alfredo T1 - GUIDO: a hybrid approach to guideline discovery & ordering from natural language texts T2 - Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Data Science, Technology and Applications DATA - Volume 1 N2 - Extracting workflow nets from textual descriptions can be used to simplify guidelines or formalize textual descriptions of formal processes like business processes and algorithms. The task of manually extracting processes, however, requires domain expertise and effort. While automatic process model extraction is desirable, annotating texts with formalized process models is expensive. Therefore, there are only a few machine-learning-based extraction approaches. Rule-based approaches, in turn, require domain specificity to work well and can rarely distinguish relevant and irrelevant information in textual descriptions. In this paper, we present GUIDO, a hybrid approach to the process model extraction task that first, classifies sentences regarding their relevance to the process model, using a BERT-based sentence classifier, and second, extracts a process model from the sentences classified as relevant, using dependency parsing. The presented approach achieves significantly better resul ts than a pure rule-based approach. GUIDO achieves an average behavioral similarity score of 0.93. Still, in comparison to purely machine-learning-based approaches, the annotation costs stay low. KW - Natural Language Processing KW - Text Mining KW - Process Model Extraction KW - Business Process Intelligence Y1 - 2023 SN - 978-989-758-664-4 U6 - http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0012084400003541 SN - 2184-285X N1 - Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Data Science, Technology and Applications, July 11-13, 2023, in Rome, Italy. SP - 335 EP - 342 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Fredebeul-Krein, Markus A1 - Steingröver, Markus T1 - Wholesale Broadband Access to IPTV in an NGA environment : how to deal with it from a regulatory perspective? Y1 - 2012 N1 - Regional ITS Conference of the international Telecommunications Society , February 22-24, 2012 New Delhi, India SP - 1 EP - 16 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Fredebeul-Krein, Markus A1 - Steingröver, Markus T1 - Enhancing broadband development and internet usages for improving networks and services in APEC member economies: Bridging the digital divide T2 - The 19th ITS Biennial Conference 2012 “Moving Forward with Future Technologies: Opening a Platform for All” 18 - 21 November 2012, Thailand Y1 - 2013 PB - ITS CY - Bangkok ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Fredebeul-Krein, Markus A1 - Haunert, Martina T1 - Assessing the effectiveness of price cap regimes for the regulation of fixed telephony markets: has it been successful in achieving competition? : preliminary draft / by Markus Fredebeul-Krein and Martina Haunert. 19th European Regional ITS Conference of the International Telecommunications Society, September 17–19, 2008 Rome, Italy N2 - 1. Introduction 2. Tariff regulation, rebalancing and price caps 3. Price cap regimes in selected European countries 4. Has price cap regulation been successful? 5. Regulatory implications for other countries KW - Telekommunikationsmarkt KW - Telekommunikationsmarkt Y1 - 2008 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Fredebeul-Krein, Markus T1 - Time for revision: The regulation of Germany's next generation networks in the light of new economic and technological challenges on telecom markets : Presentation for the 18th Biennial conference of the International Telecommunications Society, June 24–27, 2008 Montreal, Canada N2 - On 1st January 1998, the German telecom market was fully liberalised. Since then genuine competition between market participants has developed, based on a comprehensive legal and regulatory framework that provides for safeguards against unfair competition and market power by Deutsche Telekom. Today, about 10 years after the liberalisation of the telecommunications sector a revision of this regulatory approach has become necessary because at least on three dimensions the situation is quite different from the one 10 years ago: First, with numerous established alternative operators in the market monopolies have been successfully challenged and competition introduced. Second, not only is Cable TV becoming in large parts of Germany a viable alternative for the provision of broadband services but also mobile services are becoming increasingly a substitute for fixed services. Last but not least there are important technological changes under way, requiring huge investments in infrastructure upgrades for next generation networks. In the light of these new developments the question is to which extent the current regulatory approach of severe ex-ante regulatory intervention is still appropriate. Is any part of the network of the former incumbent still a bottleneck? A more light handed regulatory approach might be the right response to this new situation. The paper is organised as follows: The first section will briefly examine the economic rationale for regulating network access. Based on the assumption that regulation is always necessary when bottlenecks exist regulatory principles for an efficient network access regime will be derived. The second section compares the situation of the German market in early 1998 with the one of today. Thereby three dimensions will be considered: the degree of competition, the potential for substitution and technological developments. The third section will define some requirements for the future regulation of telecom markets. Proposals will be elaborated how to ensure competitive telecom markets in the light of new economic and technological challenges. KW - Telekommunikationsmarkt KW - Telekommunikationsmarkt Y1 - 2008 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Fredebeul-Krein, Markus T1 - Encouraging competition and investment into next generation access networks: The case of long term risk sharing contracts N2 - Working paper distributed at 2nd Annual Next Generation Telecommunications Conference 2009, 13th – 14th October 2009, Brussels 14 pages Abstract Governments all over Europe are in the process of adopting new broadband strategies. The objective is to create modern telecommunications networks based on powerful broadband infrastructures". In doing so, they aim for innovative and investment-friendly concepts. For instance, in a recently published consultation paper on the subject the German regulator BNetzA declared that it will take “greater account of … reducing risks, securing the investment and innovation power, providing planning certainty and transparency – in order to support and advance broadband rollout in Germany”. It further states that when regulating wholesale rates it has to be ensured that “… adequate incentives for network rollout are provided on the one hand, while sustainable and fair competition is ensured on the other”. Also an EC draft recommendation on regulated network access is about to set new standards for the regulation of next generation access networks. According to the recommendation the prices of new assets shall be based on costs plus a projectspecific risk premium to be included in the costs of capital for the investment risk incurred by the operator. This approach has been criticised from various sides. In particular it has been questioned whether such an approach is adequate to meet the objectives of encouraging both competition and investment into next generation access networks. Against this background, the concept of “long term risk sharing contracts” has been proposed recently as an approach which does not only incorporate the various additional risks involved in the deployment of NGA infrastructure, but has several other advantages. This paper will demonstrate that the concept allows for competition to evolve at both the retail and wholesale level on fair, objective, non-discriminatory and transparent terms and conditions. Moreover, it ensures the highest possible investment incentive in line with socially desirable outcome. The paper is organised as follows: The next section will briefly outline the importance of encouraging competition and investment in an NGA-environment. The third section will specify the design of long term risk sharing contracts in view of achieving these objectives. The fourth section will examine potential problems associated with the concept. In doing so a way of how to deal with them will be elaborated. The last section will look at arguments against long term risk sharing contracts. It will be shown that these arguments are not strong enough to build a case against introducing such contracts. KW - Electronic Commerce KW - Breitband Markt KW - Regulierung KW - Internet KW - Bundesnetzagentur KW - broadband market KW - regulation KW - Internet KW - next generation access networks KW - risk sharing Y1 - 2009 ER -