Simulation-Based Enterprise Management
ZACHAREWICZ, Gregory
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
Laboratoire des Sciences des Risques [LSR]
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Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
Laboratoire des Sciences des Risques [LSR]
ZACHAREWICZ, Gregory
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
Laboratoire des Sciences des Risques [LSR]
< Réduire
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
Laboratoire des Sciences des Risques [LSR]
Langue
EN
Chapitre d'ouvrage
Ce document a été publié dans
2018-07p. 261-289
Résumé en anglais
Industrial enterprises are gradually integrating Modeling & Simulation (M&S) approaches to support their management processes and to keep themselves competitive in the market by handling and connecting more efficiently ...Lire la suite >
Industrial enterprises are gradually integrating Modeling & Simulation (M&S) approaches to support their management processes and to keep themselves competitive in the market by handling and connecting more efficiently their key information. On the one hand, several modeling solutions exist, with different views or abstraction levels, which are not always compatible; on the other hand, the usage of simulation for enterprise management should be aligned with the nature of decision-making. This hinders the choice of an adapted M&S solution. To facilitate the resolution of this issue, this chapter mainly proposes to apply Model Driven Service Engineering Architecture (MDSEA) , which guides the usage of M&S for enterprise management at business/technical levels or with static/dynamic points of view. In its first part, the chapter focuses on different state-of-the-art elements (e.g., Enterprise Modeling, Discrete Event Simulation, etc.) which support the development of a simulation-aided decision making cycle for enterprise management. Simulation models involved in this cycle can be gradually created from transformation of high-level or static models. An example of such transformation is described in the second part of this chapter. The objective is to move from BPMN 2.0 (Business Process Model and Notation) to DEVS (Discrete EVent Specification) which is a simulation-ready language. The second part ends by presenting a use-case and the implemented open-source software, called Service Lifecycle Management Tool Box (SLMToolBox). The chapter is concluded by discussing the propositions and the perspectives, particularly simulation of decision models for enterprise management.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Simulation
Bpmn
Mdsea
Mda
Mde
Devs
M&S
Business Process
Decision Aid
Ea*
Enterprise Management
Enterprise Modeling
Grai
Hierarchical Decomposition
Interoperability System
Mdi
Model Transformation Atl
Slmtool Box
Unités de recherche