TY - GEN
T1 - Merging several business process variants
AU - Li, Huifang
AU - Mohamed El-Amine, Harbi
AU - Mohamed, Hachou
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - In the last decade, modern sophisticated process-aware information systems have been taken place to provide a new possibility of process model configurations at build-time and enable process instance changes during runtime. However, this advantage has generated another challenge, which is the high price of configuration and maintenance of the big number of the derived process model variants (process variants for short). This paper proposes an algorithm that accepts as input a collection of process variants and generates a merged model. This algorithm has four main steps: determine the distinct blocks, common blocks, placeholders and finally construct the merged model. The merged model contains two types of blocks, common blocks and placeholders; the first block captures the commonalities of the process variants, and the second one captures the differences between them. In this way, the merged model is kept as small as possible. Furthermore, this merged model can subsumes the behaviors of all input models, ensures the trace back of each element from which input model is originated, and derives any of the input models from the merged model. Existing solutions either fail in respecting these requirements or allow only for merging pairs of process models. However, our algorithm allows for merging a collection of process variants at the same time.
AB - In the last decade, modern sophisticated process-aware information systems have been taken place to provide a new possibility of process model configurations at build-time and enable process instance changes during runtime. However, this advantage has generated another challenge, which is the high price of configuration and maintenance of the big number of the derived process model variants (process variants for short). This paper proposes an algorithm that accepts as input a collection of process variants and generates a merged model. This algorithm has four main steps: determine the distinct blocks, common blocks, placeholders and finally construct the merged model. The merged model contains two types of blocks, common blocks and placeholders; the first block captures the commonalities of the process variants, and the second one captures the differences between them. In this way, the merged model is kept as small as possible. Furthermore, this merged model can subsumes the behaviors of all input models, ensures the trace back of each element from which input model is originated, and derives any of the input models from the merged model. Existing solutions either fail in respecting these requirements or allow only for merging pairs of process models. However, our algorithm allows for merging a collection of process variants at the same time.
KW - Even-driven Process Chain
KW - business process variants
KW - merged process model
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84905232832&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/CCDC.2014.6853112
DO - 10.1109/CCDC.2014.6853112
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84905232832
SN - 9781479937066
T3 - 26th Chinese Control and Decision Conference, CCDC 2014
SP - 5218
EP - 5223
BT - 26th Chinese Control and Decision Conference, CCDC 2014
PB - IEEE Computer Society
T2 - 26th Chinese Control and Decision Conference, CCDC 2014
Y2 - 31 May 2014 through 2 June 2014
ER -