Journal of Web Engineering

Journal Title

  • Journal of Web Engineering

ISSN

  • E 1544-5976 | P 1540-9589 | 1540-9589 | 1544-5976

Publisher

  • Rinton Press, Inc.

Listed on(Coverage)

JCR2008-2019
SJR2009-2019
CiteScore2011-2019
SCIE2010-2021
CC2016-2021
SCOPUS2017-2020

Active

  • Active

    based on the information

    • SCOPUS:2020-10

Country

  • DENMARK

Aime & Scopes

  • Aims and Scope: The WorldWide Web and its associated technologies have become a major implementationand delivery platform for a large variety of applications, ranging fromsimple institutional information Web sites to sophisticated supply-chainmanagement systems, financial applications, e-government, distance learning,and entertainment, among others. Such applications, in addition to theirintrinsic functionality, also exhibit the more complex behavior ofdistributed applications. Recently, there have been some advancestowards re-framing the development - both design and implementation - of Webapplications as a disciplined and systematic endeavor. However, the vastmajority of existing applications have been developed in an ad-hoc way,leading to problems of maintainability, quality and reliability. Webapplications are software artifacts, and as such can benefit by making useof established practices stemming from several related disciplines such asSoftware Engineering, Hypermedia, Information Systems, Human-ComputerInteraction and Organizational Science, enabling creation, management andreuse of structures of the information space as well as enhancing theend-user experience. In addition, it has its own characteristics which mustbe addressed, such as a varied user population, very short developmentturnaround times, diverse runtime environments, accessibility throughmultiple devices, etc. Web Engineering is the scientificdiscipline that studies the theory and practice of constructing Web-basedsystems and applications. This includes theoretical principles andsystematic, disciplined and quantifiable approaches towards thecost-effective development and evolution of high-quality, ubiquitouslyusable Web-based systems and applications. It fundamentally concerns thetechnology which enables the construction of Web applications. WebEngineering, while rooted in Computer Science and Engineering, draws from adiverse range of other disciplines, such as information science,information systems, management and business, among others. Web Engineering encompasses, but is not restricted to: /// Web application development methods and processes /// Web application development tools and environments /// Modeling and model-based design and development /// Component-based Web application development /// Navigation and hypermedia /// Content retrieval and search /// Human-computer interaction and user modeling /// Web application usability /// Adaptive Web applications and personalization /// Web application deployment /// Web application quality, metrics and measurement /// Web application evaluation, verification and validation /// Testing automation, methods and tools for Web applications /// Performance modeling, monitoring and evaluation /// Federated and cross-organizational Web applications /// Service-oriented Web application approaches /// Implementation Architectures /// Use and integration of meta-data in Web applications /// Application of Semantic Web technology in Web applications /// Web design patterns and pattern mining /// Web Engineering education The Journal of Web Engineering (JWE) aimsto provide a forum for advancing the scientific state of knowledge in allareas of Web Engineering. Original articles, survey articles, reviews,tutorials, perspectives, and general correspondence are all welcome.Appropriate submissions should address significant issues and problems, andpotential solutions, and will be reviewed in accordance with peer reviewconventions. Besides the regular paper submission andreviewing process, JWE also publishes special issues. These special issuesare typically theme-based. This means that they have a coherent focus on agiven theme and the set of papers contained in the issue together deepen theunderstanding of the Web Engineering discipline or explore the bounds of thediscipline. As such, the special issue is different from a regular issuethat contains a number of papers within the journal's scope, by its focus onone theme relevant for the discipline. Proposals for special issues arewelcome and need to specify and motivate the theme and the composition ofthe set of papers to be included. The papers in a special issue will gothrough a regular process of reviewing.

Article List

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