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The 16th International Conference on Business Process Management
(BPM 2018) is the most prestigious forum for researchers and
practitioners in the field of Business Process Management.
BPM 2018 features a Demonstration Track that is intended to
showcase innovative Business Process Management (BPM) tools and
applications that may originate either from research initiatives
or from industry.
The Demonstration Track will provide an opportunity to present and
discuss emerging technologies with researchers and practitioners
in the BPM field.
For the inclusion in the demonstration tracks, tools will be
evaluated on the basis of relevance to the BPM community as well
as on novelty and innovativeness. Previously demonstrated tools
are also welcome if there is clear evidence of the value added to
the previous version of the tool, such as new tool features and/or
its adaptation and use for new practical applications. The tools
will also be evaluated on their maturity, complexity and
robustness, such as the list of features, supported use cases,
number and types of users. In order for reviewers to assess the
maturity and robustness, the tools needs to be available for
testing. If the tool requires a license, this needs to be provided
to the reviewers, at least limited to the reviewing period. The
procedure to obtain the license must not disclose the identity of
the reviewers.
The tool submission needs to be accompanied by a demo paper
discussing the relevance, novelty, innovativeness and maturity of
the tool. Demo papers must be no longer than 5 pages in PDF format
and must adhere to Springer’s LNCS submission formatting
guidelines (for instructions and style sheets see
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). They should
contain at least the following parts:
Title, authors and affiliation;
An abstract;
An introduction section, which, among others, should highlight the
significance of the tool to the BPM field;
A section discussing the innovations of the tool to the BPM
community and its main features;
A section describing the maturity of the tool. For this section,
it is wise to include a brief description of case studies
performed using the tool, provide scalability data or pointers
indicating where readers can find more information about these
case studies;
A link to a video that screencasts and demonstrates the tool,
preferably including voice, which must not be longer than 25
minutes;
A link to a Web page where to download or use the tool. If the
tool requires a license, a paper’s appendix should describe how to
obtain a (temporary) license. The procedure to obtain the license
must not disclose the identity of the reviewers. The appendix will
not be included in the final version for the proceedings, if the
demo is accepted.
Demo papers should be submitted through the BPM2018 submission
system hosted by EasyChair at
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bpm2018. The submission
system is shared with the main conference. Once logged in, authors
should select the Demonstration Track as option to submit.
All demo submissions will be reviewed by the demo reviewing
committee. Accepted demo papers will be published as online CEUR
proceedings.
Each tool/application will be presented plenary using one or
two-minute teasers informing the audience about the available
demos. The actual demonstrations will then be held in a dedicated
slot with all tools/applications being shown in parallel. The
dedicated slot will be divided into blocks of 15 minutes. At the
end of each block, the audience is expected to move from one demo
to another and the presenters will start over a new demonstration
session of their respective tools. Physical presence of at least
one presenter per demo is mandatory. Each demo session will be
provided with, among the others, a power board and, if authors are
willing, a Blu-tak (reusable adhesive) to put up a poster on the
wall.
The reviewing committee will also vote on the best demo to be
granted the BPM 2018 Best Demo Award.
Key Dates
Deadline for demo submissions: 11 June, 2018
Notification of acceptance: 14 July, 2018
Camera-ready papers deadline: 28 July, 2018
Demo Chairs:
Raffaele Conforti (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Massimiliano de Leoni (Eindhoven University of Technology,
Netherlands)
Barbara Weber (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)
Program Committee
Fernanda Araujo Baiao (UNIRIO, Brazil)
Banu Aysolmaz (Maastricht University, the Netherlands)
Abel Armas Cervantes (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Andrea Burattin (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)
Benoît Depaire (Hasselt University, Belgium)
Claudio Di Ciccio (Vienna University of Economics and Business,
Austria)
Jan Claes (Ghent University, Belgium)
Rik Eshuis (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Henrik Leopold (VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
Felix Mannhardt (SINTEF, Norway)
Andrea Marrella (SAPIENZA University of Rome, Italy)
Artem Polyvyanyy (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Rüdiger Pryss (University of Ulm, Germany)
Stefanie Rinderle-Ma (University of Vienna, Austria)
Nick Russell (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
Stefan Schönig (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
Dennis Schunselaar (VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
António Silva (IST/INESC-ID, Portugal)
Eric Verbeek (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands)
Ingo Weber (Data61, CSIRO, Australia)
Mathias Weske (HPI, University of Potsdam, Germany)
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Dr Raffaele Conforti | Lecturer
School of Computing and Information Systems
Melbourne School of Engineering | The University of Melbourne
Level 10, Doug McDonell Building, Victoria 3010, Australia
W:
www.raffaeleconforti.com<http://www.raffaeleconforti.com/>
T: +61 3 903 56254
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