Rüdiger Valk.
Petri nets as token objects - an introduction to elementary object
nets.
In Jörg Desel and Manuel Silva, editors, 19th International
Conference on Application and Theory of Petri nets, Lisbon, Portugal,
number 1420 in Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 1-25, Berlin,
Heidelberg, New York, 1998. Springer-Verlag.
[link]
Abrégé: The model of Elementary Object System is introduced and motivated by several examples and applications. Object systems support a modeling of systems by Petri nets following the paradigm of Object-Oriented Modeling. They are composed of a System Net and one or more Object Nets which can be seen as token objects of the system net. By this approach an interesting and challenging two-level system modeling technique is introduced. Similar to the object-oriented approach, complex systems are modeled close to their real appearance in a natural way to promote clear and reliable concepts. Applications in fields like workflow, flexible manufacturing or agent-oriented approaches (mobile agents and/or intelligent agents as in AI research) are feasible. This paper gives an introduction with several examples, but only few definitions and no theorems, which can be found, however, in a more elaborated paper[link]
@INPROCEEDINGS{Valk98, AUTHOR = {Valk, R{\"u}diger}, ADDRESS = Springer.addr, BOOKTITLE = {19th International Conference on Application and Theory of {Petri} nets, Lisbon, Portugal}, EDITOR = {Desel, J{\"o}rg and Silva, Manuel}, NUMBER = {1420}, PAGES = {1--25}, PUBLISHER = Springer, SERIES = LNCS, ISSN = {0302-9743}, TITLE = {{Petri} Nets as Token Objects - An Introduction to Elementary Object Nets}, YEAR = 1998, url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-69108-1_1}, xdoi = {10.1007/3-540-69108-1_1}, abstract = {The model of Elementary Object System is introduced and motivated by several examples and applications. Object systems support a modeling of systems by Petri nets following the paradigm of Object-Oriented Modeling. They are composed of a System Net and one or more Object Nets which can be seen as token objects of the system net. By this approach an interesting and challenging two-level system modeling technique is introduced. Similar to the object-oriented approach, complex systems are modeled close to their real appearance in a natural way to promote clear and reliable concepts. Applications in fields like workflow, flexible manufacturing or agent-oriented approaches (mobile agents and/or intelligent agents as in AI research) are feasible. This paper gives an introduction with several examples, but only few definitions and no theorems, which can be found, however, in a more elaborated paper} }
This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.