570 research outputs found
2nd International Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS 2016)
The increased availability of sensors disseminated in the world has lead to the possibility to monitor in detail the evolution of several real-world objects of interest. GPS receivers, RFID chips, transponders, detectors, cameras, satellites, etc. concur in the depiction of the current status of monitored things. Therefore, the opportunity arose to connect physical reality to digital information. The screening of real- world objects makes indeed sensors the interface towards real- world information, as they are the originators of machine- readable events. The amount of information at hand would consent a fine-grained monitoring, mining, and decision support for business processes, stemming from the joint observation of business-related objects in real world. The aim of the 2nd Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS) is to attract novel research investigating the connection of business processes with real-world objects monitoring. Conceptual, technical, and application-oriented contributions are pursued within the scope of this theme
1st International Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS 2015)
The increased availability of sensors disseminated in the world has led to the possibility to monitor in detail the evolution of several real-world objects of interest. GPS receivers, RFID chips, transponders, detectors, cameras, satellites, etc. concur in the depiction of the current status of monitored things. Therefore, the opportunity arose to connect physical reality to digital information. The screening of real-world objects makes indeed sensors the interface toward real-world information, as they are the originators of machine-readable events. The exploitation of such knowledge is leading to successful applications such as Smart Cities, Flight Monitoring, Pollution Control, Internet of Things, and Dynamic Manufacturing Networks. The objective of the 1st Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS 2015), organized in conjunction with the 27th Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2015), is to attract novel research and industry approaches investigating the connection of business processes with real-world objects. Conceptual, technical, and application- oriented contributions were pursued within the scope of this theme
Message from the EDOC 2017 workshop chairs
Presents the introductory welcome message from the conference proceedings. May include the conference officers' congratulations to all involved with the conference event and publication of the proceedings record
Predictive Insights for Personalising Esophagogastric Cancer Treatment Process - A Case Study
For metastatic esophagogastric cancer (EGC), treatments aim to extend survival time, manage symptoms, and enhance the quality of life . However, determining the best treatments for patients with EGC is challenging due to patients’ variability. Personalised treatments supported by predictive models enable tailoring treatment process to individuals. Even so, traditional predictive models often neglect the interaction between treatments, limiting their utility in comprehensive planning. State-of-the-art Predictive Process Monitoring shows promising results in predicting the outcome of the treatment process but often lacks transparency. This paper investigates the potential of supporting healthcare experts in personalising the EGC treatment process, using eXplainable Predictive Process Monitoring methods. A real-world case study among 7,090 patients identifies expert needs for helpful explanations and discusses the capabilities and limitations of existing methods, suggesting future research directions. Our findings demonstrate high-quality explanations with strong fidelity, providing insights validated by expert knowledge. While the resulting explanations are not always actionable, experts acknowledged their value for exploratory analysis
Teaching Process Redesign with a Competition
Business process redesign is an important part of Business Process Management. However, evaluating the impact of a process redesign in an educational setting poses challenges, because students do not get direct feedback on whether the redesigned process is better. Feedback received from the lecturers on that feels less realistic to them. To address this issue, we developed an assignment that enhances the learning experience by facilitating students in analyzing and redesigning a business process and immediately seeing the effect of their redesign on performance indicators. This paper presents the design and implementation of the assignment. The assignment focuses on the redesign of a business process with respect to operational decisions made in the process. It is presented to the students in the form of a competition to motivate them further. This year, the assignment focused on improving the treatment process of a fictitious hospital by optimizing decisions on patient admission and resource allocation. However, the assignment is developed in a general framework, which facilitates the development of new or modified assignments on a yearly basis. This year, the assignment has been used in courses at two different universities and is planned for further use at three other universities. The assignments that the students handed in showed good understanding by the students and showed that they made a real effort to solve the assignment well. Informal feedback from the students was also positive
Service-oriented design: a multi-viewpoint approach
As the technology associated with the "Web Services" trend gains significant adoption, the need for a corresponding design approach becomes increasingly important. This paper introduces a foundational model for designing (composite) services. The innovation of this model lies in the identification of four interrelated viewpoints (interface behaviour, provider behaviour, choreography, and orchestration) and their formalization from a control-flow perspective in terms of Petri nets. By formally capturing the interrelationships between these viewpoints, the proposal enables the static verification of the consistency of composite services designed in a cooperative and incremental manner. A proof-of-concept simulation and verification tool has been developed to test the possibilities of the proposed model
Optimizing Resource Allocation Policies in Real-World Business Processes Using Hybrid Process Simulation and Deep Reinforcement Learning
Resource allocation refers to the assignment of resources to activities for their execution within a business process at runtime. While resource allocation approaches are common in industries such as manufacturing, directly applying them to business processes remains a challenge. Recently, techniques like Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) have been used to learn efficient resource allocation strategies to minimize the cycle time. While DRL has been proven to work well for simplified synthetic processes, its usefulness in real-world business processes remains untested, partly due to the challenging nature of realizing accurate simulation environments. To overcome this limitation, we propose DRLHSM that combines DRL with Hybrid simulation models (HSM). The HSM can accurately replicate the business process behavior so that we can assess the effectiveness of DRL in optimizing real-world business processes. We evaluate our method on four real-world and two elaborate synthetic business processes, constrained by temporal resource availability and a restricted number of resources. An empirical evaluation shows that DRLHSM outperforms the benchmarks by, on average, 45%, up to 307%, in 14 out of 24 considered evaluation scenarios and is competitive with the best-performing benchmark in 8 scenarios.</p
Service Composition: Concepts, Techniques, Tools and Trends
This chapter provides an overview of the area of service composition. It does so byintroducing a generic architecture for service composition and using this architecture todiscuss some salient concepts and techniques. The architecture is also used as aframework for providing a critical view into a number of languages, standardizationefforts, and tools related to service composition emanating both from academia andindustry, and to classify them in terms of the concepts and techniques that theyincorporate or support (e.g. orchestration and dynamic service selection). Finally, thechapter discusses some trends in service-oriented software systems engineeringpertaining to service composition
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