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Analyst Workbenches, State of the Art Report 15:1
Table of contents : Content: Front Matter, Page iii Copyright, Page iv Foreword, Page vii, R Rock-Evans Publisher's note, Page ix 1 - The ICL approach to automating analysis and design, Pages 3-20, A Beer 2 - Automation—what does the analyst really need?, Pages 21-31, T Bourne 3 - The need for automation of analysis, Pages 33-39, R H Burchett 4 - Towards automation of the performance analysis function, Pages 41-61, A Bytheway 5 - A review of analyst workbench products, Pages 63-84, D J L Gradwell 6 - Analyst workbenches—what the future holds, Pages 85-94, N Hawker 7 - Analyst workbenches and knowledge engineering/artificial intelligence, Pages 95-104, M T Jacques, G A Otten 8 - Strategy studies—the future, Pages 105-121, L A Kuramoto 9 - Automating the information engineer—IPSEs and workbenches in context, Pages 123-145, I G Macdonald 10 - Analyst workbenches—design and other mapping issues, Pages 147-161, K W Short 1 - What is an analyst workbench?, Pages 169-197 2 - The scope of workbench products, Pages 199-313 3 - Method specific or method independent?, Pages 315-328 4 - The level of support offered by some existing products, Pages 329-355 5 - Selection of a workbench, Pages 357-378 6 - Is automation really the answer?, Pages 379-391 7 - The future of workbench products, Pages 393-402 Invited Paper references, Pages 163-166 Analysis references, Page 403 An annotated bibliography on analyst workbenches and their evolution and origin, Pages 407-426, B C Burrows Subject and contributor index, Pages 429-436