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.
1st International Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS 2015) / Di Ciccio, Claudio; Baumgraß, Anne; Dijkman, Remco. - (2015). (Intervento presentato al convegno Advanced Information Systems Engineering Workshops tenutosi a Stockholm, Sweden nel June 8-9, 2015).
1st International Workshop on the Role of Real-World Objects in Business Process Management Systems (RW-BPMS 2015)
Di Ciccio, Claudio;
2015
Abstract
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.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.