
 
acts immersed in the conversations that generate the 
commitments in business transactions occurring in 
the ebXML virtual space. An important challenge 
for this proposal is to understand the types of 
conversations that occur during an electronic 
business transaction. Moreover, these conversations 
must be mapped, classified, and organized. Work is 
being carried out towards finding and characterizing 
a conversational ontology able to:  capture concepts 
and relations inside the business domain; derive a set 
of axioms that enable translating and modeling a 
B2B representation; and capture subtle issues typical 
from human nature such as the ones occurring in 
electronic business transactions. In order to envision 
the mode and context of these conversations, a 
mapping from the elements of CSC and the 
negotiation cycle of ebXML is proposed (see Figure 
6). The relationship between the CSC and ebXML 
are only graphically presented due to space 
limitations. 
 
Figure 6: CSC and ebXML components. 
6 ONGOING WORK 
The current efforts include the creation of an agent 
organization and the specification of a normative 
environment in which possible behaviors in the 
ebXML context can be defined. Agents can be used 
to establish automatic or semiautomatic 
conversations or even to help in the negotiations. In 
this context, some questions like the following must 
be considered: What are the most likely or possible 
conversations? Are them recurrent? Can they be 
classified, organized, mapped? According to Paes et 
al (2005), the interaction among agents in an 
organization can be considered in the following 
levels: content level, related to the content of the 
information interchanged between agents; intention 
level, referring to the expression of the agent 
intention, usually by means of an ACL (Agent 
Communication Language); conversation level, 
which concerns to the shared conventions during the 
interchange of utterances; transportation level that 
provides mechanisms to help in the transportation of 
utterances; and the connection level, involving 
protocols as TCP/IP, IIOP, among others. The 
conversation protocols can be seen as coordination 
patterns that restrict the utterance sequences 
interchanged during a conversation, that is what can 
be said, by whom and when (Martin et al, 1999). 
Moreover, an ontology must be defined to establish 
the possible values for the concepts in the ebXML 
context and the regulations for the agents. These 
regulations define the agents’ possible behavior and 
the consequences of their actions (Esteva, 2003). 
REFERENCES 
Ebxml, 2012. http://www.ebxml.org. 
Esteva, M., 2003. Electronic Institutions: from 
specification to development. IIIA, Barcelona, Spain.  
Flores, F., 1997. Creando Organizaciones Para El Futuro. 
Dolmen Ediciones S.A. 5ª Edición. 
Graham, I., Pollack, N., Smart, A., Williams, R., 2003. 
Institutionalization of e-Business Standards. Frontier 
for Information Systems.  
Hakvoort, R., 2004. ebXML and its impact on 
conventional Business Information Systems. 1st 
Twente Student Conference on IT. 
Hofreiter, B., Huemer, C., Klas. W., 2002. ebXML: 
Status, Research Issues, and Obstacles. In: Research 
Issues in Data Engineering: Engineering E-Commerce 
- E-Business Systems - RIDE-2EC 2002.  
Irani, R., 2002. An Introduction to ebXML. Collaborative 
Electronic Business is here to stay. In: M. Clark et al, 
Web Services Business Strategies and Architectures. 
Expert. 
Liang, P. et al, 2011. ebXML-Based Electronic Business 
Interoperability Framework and Test Platform" In: 
Electronic Business Interoperability: Concepts, 
Opportunities and Challenges, p. 438-456. IGI Global. 
Martín, F. J., Plaza, E., Rodriguez-Aguilar, J. A., 1999. An 
infrastructure for agent-based systems: an interagent 
approach. International Journal of Intelligent Systems.  
Paes, R. B., 2005. Regulando a interação de agentes em 
sistemas abertos: uma abordagem de leis. MSc 
Thesis. Rio de Janeiro: PUC-Rio. 
Rawlins, M. C., 2002. ebXML - A Critical Analysis, 
Rawlins EC Consulting.  
Smith, D. C., Vinoski, S., 2001. Object Interconnections: 
CORBA and XML, C/C++ Users Journal. 
Tidwell, D. Introduction to XML. IBM developerWorks. 
W3C, 2004a, Extensible Markup Language (XML). 
W3C, 2004b, XML Protocol Working Group.  
Webber, D., Dutton, 2000, A. Understanding ebXML, 
UDDI, XML/EDI. XMLGlobal.  
Winograd, T., Flores, F., 1987. Understanding computers 
and cognition. Addison-Wesley. 
Enterprise 
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evision of 
CPP and BP 
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declaration 
Reliance
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interests 
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interests 
CPP(A) / CPP(B)
Business completion 
CPP and EBPS 
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register/recover 
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