Moreover the quantification of the importance is
based on assessment, and has only been considered
to prioritize the different soft-goals. The early
identification of those limits pushes us to the
introduction of uncertainty factor, but all those
parameters are not yet well formalized.
5.2 Further Work
A first step for further works would be to define
uncertainty and importance indicators, with detailed
description of each level, and then refine the formula
assessing acceptance.
A second point would be to establish more
precise characterizations for agents and VE’s
structures. Definitely, typing architecture, with
precise description of their specificities, would allow
reusing analysis of previous cases, and build little by
little a bank of classic sub-structure includes in VE.
Also, typing actors according to their position in the
VE would provide a mean to check all along the
design process if the way the structure is evolving
match the initial idea for role distribution among the
partners.
Finally we believe that it could be relevant to put
forward the idea of evaluation focused on Agent,
and consider each stakeholder as a user of the VE,
who tries to use it to complete his own goals, and so,
conduct strictly user-oriented evaluation (Mourouzis
et al., 2006).
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was financially supported by the Science
and Technology Commission of Shanghai
Municipality (12dz1507000) and the Fundamental
Research Funds for the Central Universities
(2100219030).
REFERENCES
Jähn, H., Fischer, M., & Zimmermann, M., 2005. An
approach for the ascertainment of profit shares for
network participants. In Collaborative Networks and
Their Breeding Environments (pp. 257-264). Springer
Kaisler, S. H., Armour, F., & Valivullah, M., 2005.
Enterprise architecting: Critical problems. In System
Sciences, 2005. HICSS'05. Proceedings of the 38th
Annual Hawaii International Conference on (pp.
224b-224b). IEEE.
Gajda, R., 2004. Utilizing collaboration theory to evaluate
strategic alliances. American Journal of Evaluation,
25(1), 65-77.
Van Lamsweerde, A., & Letier, E., 2004. From object
orientation to goal orientation: A paradigm shift for
requirements engineering. In Radical Innovations of
Software and Systems Engineering in the Future (pp.
325-340). Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Yu, E., 2011. Modelling strategic relationships for process
reengineering. Social Modelling for Requirements
Engineering, 11, 2011.
Thompson, K. (2008). The Networked Enterprise.
Competing for the Future Through Virtual Enterprise
Networks. Meghan Kiffer, Tampa.
Mariotti, J. L., 1996. The Power of Partnerships: The Next
Step beyond TQM, Reengineering, and Lean
Production. Blackwell Business.
Yu, E. S., 1993. Modelling organizations for information
systems requirements engineering. In Requirements
Engineering, 1993, Proceedings of IEEE International
Symposium on (pp. 34-41). IEEE.
Martinez, M. T., Fouletier, P., Park, K. H., & Favrel, J.,
2001. Virtual enterprise–organisation, evolution and
control. International Journal of Production
Economics, 74(1), 225-238.
Eric, S. K., Giorgini, P., Maiden, N., & Mylopoulos, J.
(Eds.)., 2011. Social modelling for requirements
engineering. (pp 669-691).Mit Press.
Daniel Zota, R., & Fratila, A., 2013. Toward the selection
of an enterprise architecture model for a cloud
environment. In Roedunet International Conference
(RoEduNet), 2013 11th (pp. 1-6). IEEE.
Mourouzis, A., Antona, M., Boutsakis, E., & Stephanidis,
C., 2006. A user-orientation evaluation framework:
Assessing accessibility throughout the user experience
lifecycle. In Computers Helping People with Special
Needs (pp. 421-428). Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
ICORES2014-InternationalConferenceonOperationsResearchandEnterpriseSystems
310