International Workshop on Data-Driven Process Discovery and Analysis
Scope
The workshop provides a unique opportunity to present new approaches and research results to researchers and practitioners working in business process data modeling, representation and privacy-aware analysis. All papers must be original contributions, not previously published or under review for publication elsewhere. All contributions must be written in English. A special session will be dedicated to discuss research plan from PhD students.
Topics for the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- Business Process modeling languages, notations and methods
- Data-aware and data-centric approaches
- Variability and configuration of process models
- Process Mining with Big Data
- Process simulation and static analyses
- Process data query languages
- Process data mining
- Privacy-aware process data mining
- Process metadata and semantic reasoning
- Process patterns and standards
- Foundations of business process models
- Resource management in business process execution
- Process tracing and monitoring
- Process change management and evolution
- Business process lifecycle
- Case studies and experience reports
- Social process discovery
- Crowdsourced process definition and discovery
Workshop Co-Chairs
Rafael Accorsi, University of Freiburg, Germany
Paolo Ceravolo, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Philippe Cudré-Mauroux, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
Program Committee
This workshop was born by the joint initiative of the IFIP WG 2.6 and 2.12/12.4 (see section on the historical information) and is actively supported by the following people:
Rafael Accorsi, University of Freiburg, Germany
Paolo Ceravolo, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Philippe Cudré-Mauroux, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
Ernesto Damiani, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Tharam Dillon, La Trobe University, Australia
Luigi Gallo, ICAR-CNR, Italy
Marcello Leida, EBTIC (Etisalat BT Innovation Centre), UAE
Michiharu Kudoh, IBM, Japan
Setsuo Tsuruta, Tokyo Denki University, Japan