Betreff: | [WI] Final CfP - EVL-BP'14 |
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Datum: | Tue, 15 Apr 2014 13:20:18 +0200 |
Von: | Gerd Gröner <groener@uni-koblenz.de> |
An: | <wi@aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de> |
We apologize for cross-posting. Please
circulate this CfP among your colleagues.
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The 7th International Workshop on
Evolutionary Business Processes (EVL-BP'14)
Co-located with the 18th IEEE International
EDOC Conference, http://www.edoc2014.org/
September 1-02, 2014, Ulm, Germany
The EVL-BP workshop series is devoted to
evolution in business processes. Enterprises face the
challenge of rapidly adapting to dynamic business
environments. The traditional approach to process management
is only partially appropriate to this new context, and calls
for the advent of new, evolutionary business processes. This
new approach attempts to address specific issues related to
flexibility and adaptation such as design of easily adaptable
processes, dynamic handling of unexpected situations,
optimality of adaptations, and change management. Central to
the field of evolutionary business processes is the notion of
requirement, which drive the change of business processes
through their life-cycles. The evolution of processes and
their underlying software systems becomes more and more an
important and interesting topic in business process
management. Since the life time of software systems frequently
spans many years, business processes modeled on top of systems
cannot be assumed to remain fixed, and migration between
different versions is essential. As a consequence, modeling
and management techniques developed in the context of ad-hoc,
short-term composition of services and their processes lack
the necessary constructs to concisely express the gradual
evolution of processes and software systems and new dynamic,
declarative, and/or configurable approaches in this context
are required.
The evolutionary approach to business
processes raises a number of challenges: extracting
declarative specifications from domain experts, expressing
these declarative specifications in an appropriate language or
formalism, as well as designing, monitoring, checking
compliance, configuring, or dynamically adapting business
processes according to a set of requirements, identification
and systematic handling of changes, management of process
versions, or quality attributes and measurement of business
processes as predictors of evolutionary business processes.
Evolution in business processes takes place in a wide number
of domains, and is expected to impact existing and future
technology choices, business practices and standardization
efforts. This workshop will be an opportunity for participants
to exchange opinions, advance ideas, and discuss preliminary
results on current topics related to dynamic and declarative
business processes. A particular interest will be taken in
bridging theoretical research and practical issues. To this
end, contributions stating open problems, case studies, tool
presentations, or any other work assessing the practical
significance of dynamic and declarative business processes by
means of concrete examples and situations, will be
particularly welcome. Work in progress, position papers
stating broad avenues of research, and work on formal
foundations of dynamic and declarative business processes are
also sought-after.
Topics:
- Evolutionary
business process modelling
- Dynamic
business process specification
- Implementation
issues for evolutionary processes
- Tools
for evolutionary processes
- Methodologies
for evolutionary processes
- Variability
management in adaptable business processes
- Real-world
use cases of evolutionary business processes
- Business
rules and policies
- Rule
driven business process engines
- Business
+ technical requirements for evolutionary processes
- Mathematical
foundations of evolutionary business processes
- Formal
models of dynamic business processes
- Monitoring
of dynamic business processes
- Validation
and model checking of dynamic business processes
- Software
engineering methods, languages, and standards for dynamic
business processes
- Service-oriented
architectures and dynamic business processes
- Interoperability
for dynamic business processes
- Semantic
Web and ontologies and evolutionary business processes
- Collaboration
and evolutionary business processes
- Data-driven
process evolution
- Evolution
of cross-organizational processes / process choreographies
- Complex
event processing models/support for dynamic business processes
Important Dates
Workshop paper submissions: April 28, 2014
Acceptance notifications: May 31, 2014
Camera-ready papers due: June 14, 2014
Workshop: September 1-2, 2014
Please check out the workshop homepage for
more information: