2008
DOI: 10.1080/09511920601182225
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An ontology-based architecture for implementing semantic integration of supply chain management

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Cited by 55 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Similar semantic-mediation architectures for the web-service based supply-chain applications were demonstrated by Ye and Yang (2007), and Oh and Yee (2007). Ye and Yang introduced a general Supply Chain Ontology (SCO) (Ye et.al.…”
Section: Survey Of Related Semantic-mediation Approachesmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Similar semantic-mediation architectures for the web-service based supply-chain applications were demonstrated by Ye and Yang (2007), and Oh and Yee (2007). Ye and Yang introduced a general Supply Chain Ontology (SCO) (Ye et.al.…”
Section: Survey Of Related Semantic-mediation Approachesmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Ye et al proposed a supply chain ontology (SCO) to enable semantic integration between heterogeneous supply chain information systems [29]. The supply chain setting is a web-based or virtual enterprise with no specific industry focus.…”
Section: Literature Insights On Ontology-aided Supply Chain Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Supply Chain Ontology (SCO) (Ye et al 2008) sets out a number of generalist concepts and relationships that represent Supply Chain Management (SCM), examples being: supply chain, supply chain structure, performance, objective, activity and resource to highlight a few. SCO applies the Supply Chain Operations Reference model (SCOR) (Supply Chain Council 2014) to help describe the performance aspects.…”
Section: Collaboration Enterprise and Supply Chain Management Ontolomentioning
confidence: 99%