A computable framework for accountable data assets

From PKC
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Synoposis

This article prescribes an algebraic approach to manipulate data content in a unifying data abstraction framework. For non-mathematicians, this computational framework can be thought of as an highly automated and mechanized accounting system that can be extended to serve a wide range of resource authentication and authorization applications.

Introduction

According to Rambaud and Pérez[1][2], an algebraically-defined accounting practice may systematically automate the decision procedures for the following activities:

  1. Decide how to classify the data collected and send the collected data to relevant data processing workflows.
  2. Whether a given data set is considered admissible or not. This is judged in terms of its data formats and legal value ranges.
  3. Whether a transaction process is allowable, or not. This include whether a given transaction is feasible, in relevant operational/business logics.


Ownership associated with Accounts

Data Content that represent Decision Procedures

The Control Structure(If/Then/Else)

Computable Data Types

It is been defined axiomatically that all computable data types are Partially-ordered sets.

Lattices and Partially Ordered Sets

Composition and Decomposition

The Notion of Closure offered by Algebra

Applications in ICT System Development

Conclusion

Ensure System Integrity at multiple temporal cycles

Rigorous practice in Constructing and Deconstructing Data-Intensive Systems

Boosting producitivy in Software Development

Direct societal-scale applications as Integrated Data Processing Workflows

References

  1. Rambaud, Salvador Cruz; Pérez, José García; Nehmer, Robert A.; Robinson, Derek J S Robinson (2010). Algebraic Models for Accounting Systems. local page: Cambridge at the University Press. ISBN 978-981-4287-11-1. 
  2. Rambaud, Salvador Cruz; Pérez, José García (2005). "The Accounting System as an Algebraic Automaton". INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS. local page: Wiley Periodicals, Inc. 20: 827–842. 

Related Pages