Traditional activity-centric process modeling languages treat data as simple black boxes acting as input or output for activities. Many alternate and emerging process modeling paradigms, such as case handling and artifact-centric process modeling, give data a more central role. This is achieved by introducing lifecycles and states for data objects, which is beneficial when modeling data-or knowledge-intensive processes. We assume that traditional activity-centric process modeling languages lack the capabilities to adequately capture the complexity of such processes. To verify this assumption we conducted an online interview among BPM experts. The results not only allow us to identify various profiles of persons modeling business processes, but also the problems that exist in contemporary modeling languages w.r.t. The modeling of business data. Overall, this preliminary empirical study confirms the necessity of data-awareness in process modeling notations in general.

Data in Business Process Models. A Preliminary Empirical Study / Marrella, Andrea; Mecella, Massimo; Russo, Alessandro; Steinau, Sebastian; Andrews, Kevin; Reichert, Manfred. - (2015), pp. 116-122. (Intervento presentato al convegno 8th International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA 2015) tenutosi a Rome; Italy nel 19-21 October 2015) [10.1109/SOCA.2015.19].

Data in Business Process Models. A Preliminary Empirical Study

MARRELLA, ANDREA
;
Mecella, Massimo;Russo, Alessandro;
2015

Abstract

Traditional activity-centric process modeling languages treat data as simple black boxes acting as input or output for activities. Many alternate and emerging process modeling paradigms, such as case handling and artifact-centric process modeling, give data a more central role. This is achieved by introducing lifecycles and states for data objects, which is beneficial when modeling data-or knowledge-intensive processes. We assume that traditional activity-centric process modeling languages lack the capabilities to adequately capture the complexity of such processes. To verify this assumption we conducted an online interview among BPM experts. The results not only allow us to identify various profiles of persons modeling business processes, but also the problems that exist in contemporary modeling languages w.r.t. The modeling of business data. Overall, this preliminary empirical study confirms the necessity of data-awareness in process modeling notations in general.
2015
8th International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA 2015)
business process modeling; data modeling; empirical study; Hardware and Architecture; Computational Theory and Mathematics; Software
04 Pubblicazione in atti di convegno::04b Atto di convegno in volume
Data in Business Process Models. A Preliminary Empirical Study / Marrella, Andrea; Mecella, Massimo; Russo, Alessandro; Steinau, Sebastian; Andrews, Kevin; Reichert, Manfred. - (2015), pp. 116-122. (Intervento presentato al convegno 8th International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA 2015) tenutosi a Rome; Italy nel 19-21 October 2015) [10.1109/SOCA.2015.19].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/874929
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