Jan Dietz

Jean Leonardus Gerardus (Jan) Dietz (born 20 June 1945) is a Dutch Information systems researcher, Emeritus Professor of Information Systems Design, and part-time Professor of Enterprise Engineering at the Delft University of Technology,[1] known for the development of the Design & Engineering Methodology for Organizations.[2] and his work on enterprise ontology.[3]

Jan Dietz, Delft University of Technology 2008.

Biography

Born in Brunssum, Dietz studied at the Eindhoven University of Technology, where in 1970 he obtained his MA in Electrical Engineering, and later in 1987 his PhD with the thesis entitled "Modelleren en specificeren van informatiesystemen" (Specification and modeling of information systems) under supervision of Kees van Hee en Theo Bemelmans.[4]

Dietz has been practitioner in the field of automation and information systems from 1970 to 1980. Here he developed one of the first relational model based production control systems at Philips Factories, a state of the art computer accounting system at Eindhoven University of Technology, and a terminal-based, interactive theatre reservation system. In 1980 he returned to the academia. After graduation in 1987 he was appointed Professor of Management Information Systems at the University of Maastricht at the Faculty of Economics and Business Administration,[5] where he started the development of the DEMO theory and methodology. From September 1994 to Oct 2009 he was Professor of Information Systems Design at Delft University of Technology.[6] Since then he is part-time Professor of Enterprise Engineering at the Instituto Superior Técnico (IST - Technical University of Lisbon).[7] Since 2010 he is part-time Professor of Enterprise Engineering at Delft TopTech[8] at the Delft University of Technology. Since 2016 is Mr. Dietz Visiting Professor at Czech Technical University in Prague's Faculty of Informatics, Center for Conceptual Modelling and Implementations (CCMi).[9][10]

Dietz has been chairman of the Dutch national professional association of informaticians, has been editorial board member of several journals, and has been in the program committee of - and has chaired - numerous conferences. He has been the Dutch national representative in IFIP TC8 on Information Systems for many years and is member of IFIP WG8.1 on design and Evaluation of Information Systems.[6]

Work

Dietz' main research interests is in modeling, design and redesigning and engineering and reengineering of organizations, and in the development of ICT-applications to support them.[6] In the new millennium Dietz has focussed on the emerging field of Enterprise engineering, which emerged in between information systems engineering and the organizational sciences.

In 2006 he published a book on Enterprise Ontology,[11] and is continuing working on Enterprise Architecture. To promote these ideas he initiated an international network under the name "Cooperation & Interoperability - Architecture & Ontology" (CIAO).[12]

Design & Engineering Methodology for Organizations

Inspired on the Language Action Perspective in the 1980s Dietz has been developing a methodology for transaction modelling, and analysing and representing business processes called Design & Engineering Methodology for Organizations (DEMO).[13] The Language Action Perspective itself is largely based on the speech act theory developed by John Searle. It was introduced in the field of information systems by the computer scientists Fernando Flores and J.J. Ludlow early 1980s[14] has "proven to be a new basic paradigm for Information Systems Design. In contrast to traditional views of "data flow", the language/action perspective emphasizes what people do while communicating, how they create a common reality by means of language, and how communication brings about a coordination of their activities".[15]

Diagram of the principle of a DEMO transaction between two actors, with the result in between.

In DEMO the basic pattern of a business transaction is composed of the following three phases:[16]

  • An actagenic phase during which a client requests a fact form the supplier agent.
  • The action execution which will generate the required fact
  • A factagenic phase, which leads the client to accept the results reported

Basic transactions can be composed to account for complex transactions. The DEMO methodology gives the analyst an understanding of the business processes of the organization, as well as the agents involved, but is less clear about pragmatics aspects of the transaction, such as the conversation structure and the intentions generated in each agents mind.[16]

Jan Dietz is the founder of the DEMO, and he is also co-founder and chairman of the DEMO Knowledge Center [17] and he has participated in numerous practical DEMO-projects regarding the redesign and reengineering of organizations. Since early 2004 he is also the leader of the national research program Extensible Architecture Framework.[18]

Enterprise Ontology

Enterprise Ontology is about the need to develop organizational models on a high-level of abstraction, in order to be able to develop effective and efficient, so called, inter- and intra-enterprise information systems. These models need to be so that it is understood both by business people, who are defining their functionality, and software engineers, who are constructing and implementing the software systems that realize the system's functionality. The idea of business components for modeling information systems is very valuable since they directly reflect the business rules and the constraints that apply to the enterprise domain.[19]

The identification of business components seems still to be in its infancy. The notion of enterprise ontology, as developed by Jan Dietz at Delft University of Technology, appears to be a powerful revelation of the essence of an enterprise or an enterprise network. Dietz' research seeks to improve the identification of business components based on the ontological model of an enterprise, while at the same time satisfying well defined quality criteria. The results of applying the developed identification method are reusable and self-contained business components with well defined interaction points that facilitate the accessing and execution of coherent packages of business functionality.[19]

Publications

Dietz has published over 200 scientific and professional papers as well as several books:[20][21] Books:

  • 1996. Communication Modeling - The Language/Action Perspective: Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Communication Modeling, Tilburg, the Netherlands... (Electronic Workshops in Computing). With Frank Dignum, Egon Verharen, and Hans Weigand. Springer ISBN 3-540-76118-7
  • 2006. Enterprise Ontology - Theory and Methodology. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 3-540-29169-5
  • 2008. Advances in Enterprise Engineering I: 4th International Workshop CIAO! and 4th International Workshop EOMAS, held at CAiSE 2008, Montpellier, France, June 2008. Notes in Business Information Processing. With Antonia Albani, and Joseph Barjis (eds.). Springer. ISBN 3-540-68643-6
  • 2008. Architecture - Building strategy into design. Academic Service. ISBN 978-90-12-58086-1

Articles, chapters and papers, a selection:

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References

  1. Jan Dietz, Jan Hoogervorst, Junichi Iijima, Hans Mulder, Martin Op ’t Land, Erik Proper, José Tribolet, Jan Verelst, Robert Winter et al. (2013). "The discipline of enterprise engineering". International Journal of Organisational Design and Engineering, 3(1), 86-114.
  2. Goldkuhl, Goran. "Design theories in information systems-a need for multi-grounding." Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application (JITTA) 6.2 (2004): 7.
  3. Marc Lankhorst (2013) Enterprise architecture at work: Modelling, communication and analysis. Springer. p. 2
  4. J.L.G. Dietz (1987). Modelleren en specificeren van informatiesystemen. Doctoral thesis Eindhoven University of Technology.
  5. Keng Siau (2004). Advanced topics in database research, Volume 3. p.349
  6. Prof. Dr. ir. Jan L.G. Dietz Archived 2006-08-23 at the Wayback Machine Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. Retrieved 24 June 2008.
  7. Prof. Dr. ir. Jan Dietz, Associate van Icris B.V. Archived 2013-09-22 at the Wayback Machine at icris.nl/people. Accessed September 15, 2013.
  8. Key players Archived 2013-10-08 at Archive.today at delfttoptech.nl. Accessed October 10, 2013.
  9. Prof. Dr. Jan L. G. Dietz Prof. Dr. Jan L. G. Dietz at ccmi.fit.cvut.cz/about-us/jan-dietz. Accessed January 23, 2019.
  10. Prof. Dietz appointed in Prague at ee-institute.org/en/dietz-appointed-in-prague. Accessed January 23, 2019.
  11. Jan Dietz (2006). Enterprise Ontology - Theory and Methodology. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
  12. CIAO website Delft University of Technology.
  13. Jan L.G. Dietz (2001). "DEMO: towards a discipline of Organisation Engineering" In: European Journal of Operational Research, 2001.
  14. Flores F., Ludlow J. J. (1980): "Doing and Speaking in the Office", In: Fick G., Sprague R. H. Jr. (Eds.) Decision Support Systems: Issues and Challenges, pp. 95-118, Pergamon Press, New York
  15. Frank Dignum, Jan Dietz editors. (1997) Communication Modeling, The Language/Action Perspective. Second International Workshop on Communication Modeling] (LAP'97) Veldhoven, The Netherlands, JUNE 9-10 1997 Working Papers.
  16. Kecheng Liu (2001). Information, Organisation, and Technology: Studies in Organisational Semiotics. pp.198-2002.
  17. DEMO Institute.
  18. Extensible Architecture Framework Dutch national research program.
  19. Jan Dietz (2007). Enterprise Ontology and the Identification of Business Components Archived 2008-07-05 at the Wayback Machine Keynote Lectures at the ICSOFT 2007. Retrieved 24 Junly 2008.
  20. List of publications 1989-2006 Archived 2006-08-23 at the Wayback Machine.
  21. Jan L. G. Dietz at DBLP Bibliography Server
  • Homepage at the Delft University of Technology.
  • DEMO Design & Engineering Methodology for Organizations website.
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