Question: Do the problem 9; The Journal of Commerce 9-1) Write all the BUSINESS RULES from the given narrative. If in doubt, please ask your instructor
Do the problem 9; The Journal of Commerce
9-1) Write all the BUSINESS RULES from the given narrative. If in doubt, please ask your instructor for clrification.
9-2) Determine all the entities their keys and attributes of each entity.
9-3) Determine all Supertype and Subtype entities and their attributes
9-4) Determine all the relations along with their attributes.
9-5) Draw the EERD using UML notation
9-6) Draw the RELATIONAL DIAGRAM using UML notation
9-7) Write the DB SCHEMA
9-8) Write CREATE statement for each relation and create your DB
9-9) Make up DATA for your relations and write INSEERT statement
9-10) Make up 10 queries and execute them and save the output in a file
ALL YOUR WORK WILL BE SUBMITTED IN A REPORT ( only single copy)
DO NOT COPY PLEASE. I NEED YOUR OWN WORK
The Journal of E-commerce Research Knowledge is a prestigious information systems
research journal. It uses a peer-review process to select manuscripts for publication.
Only about 10 percent of the manuscripts submitted to the journal are accepted for
publication. A new issue of the journal is published each quarter. Create a complete
ERD to support the business needs described below.
Unsolicited manuscripts are submitted by authors. When a manuscript is
received, the editor assigns it a number and records some basic information
about it in the system, including the title of the manuscript, the date it was
received, and a manuscript status of received. Information about the author(s)
is also recorded, including each authors name, mailing address, email address,
and affiliation (the authors school or company). Every manuscript must have
an author. Only authors who have submitted manuscripts are kept in the system.
It is typical for a manuscript to have several authors. A single author may have
submitted many different manuscripts to the journal. Additionally, when a manuscript
has multiple authors, it is important to record the order in which the
authors are listed in the manuscript credits.
At his or her earliest convenience, the editor will briefly review the topic of
the manuscript to ensure that its contents fall within the scope of the journal.
If the content is not appropriate for the journal, the manuscripts status
is changed to rejected, and the author is notified via email. If the content is
within the scope of the journal, then the editor selects three or more reviewers
to review the manuscript. Reviewers work for other companies or universities
and read manuscripts to ensure their scientific validity. For each reviewer, the
system records a reviewer number, name, email address, affiliation, and areas
of interest. Areas of interest are predefined areas of expertise that the reviewer
has specified. An area of interest is identified by an IS code and includes a
description (e.g., IS2003 is the code for database modeling). A reviewer can
have many areas of interest, and an area of interest can be associated with
many reviewers. All reviewers must specify at least one area of interest. It is
unusual, but possible, to have an area of interest for which the journal has
no reviewers. The editor will change the status of the manuscript to under
review and record which reviewers received the manuscript and the date
it was sent to each reviewer. A reviewer will typically receive several manuscripts
to review each year, although new reviewers may not have received any
manuscripts yet.
The reviewers will read the manuscript at their earliest convenience and provide
feedback to the editor. The feedback from each reviewer includes rating the
manuscript on a 10-point scale for appropriateness, clarity, methodology, and
contribution to the field, as well as a recommendation for publication (accept
or reject). The editor will record all of this information in the system for each
review received, along with the date the feedback was received. Once all of the
reviewers have provided their evaluations, the editor will decide whether to publish
the manuscript and change its status to accepted or rejected. If the manuscript
will be published, the date of acceptance is recorded.
Once a manuscript has been accepted for publication, it must be scheduled. For
each issue of the journal, the publication period (fall, winter, spring, or summer),
publication year, volume, and number are recorded. An issue will contain
many manuscripts, although the issue may be created in the system before it is
known which manuscripts will be published in that issue. An accepted manuscript
appears in only one issue of the journal. Each manuscript goes through a
typesetting process that formats the content, including fonts, font size, line spacing,
justification, and so on. Once the manuscript has been typeset, its number
of pages is recorded in the system. The editor will then decide which issue each
accepted manuscript will appear in and the order of manuscripts within each
issue. The order and the beginning page number for each manuscript must be
stored in the system. Once the manuscript has been scheduled for an issue, the
status of the manuscript is changed to scheduled. Once an issue is published,
the print date for the issue is recorded, and the status of each manuscript in that
issue is changed to published.
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