BPMN 2012 (up)

4th International Workshop on the Business Process Model and Notation  
 
12-13 September 2012, WU Vienna, Austria  

List of Accepted Papers (up)

Full papers: 
 
  • Felix Kossak, Christa Illibauer and Verena Geist. Event-based Gateways: Open Questions and Inconsistencies 
  • Rami-Habib Eid-Sabbagh, Matthias Kunze, Andreas Meyer and Mathias Weske. A Platform for Research on Process Model Collections 
  • Pit Pietsch and Sven Wenzel. Similarity-Based Comparison of BPMN2 Diagrams 
  • Luisa Parody, María Teresa Gómez-López and Rafael M. Gasca. Extending BPMN 2.0 for Modelling the Combination of Activities that involve Data Constraints 
  • Amin Jalali, Petia Wohed and Chun Ouyang. Aspect Oriented Business Process Modeling with Precedence 
  • Oliver Kopp, Tobias Binz, Uwe Breitenbücher and Frank Leymann. BPMN4TOSCA: A Domain-Specific Language to Model Management Plans for Composite Applications 
 
Short papers: 
 
  • Thomas Allweyer and Stefan Schweitzer. A Tool for Animating BPMN Token Flow 
  • Yulia Cherdantseva, Jeremy Hilton and Omer Rana. SecureBPMN - Aligning BPMN with the Information Assurance & Security Domain 
  • Alfonso Rodriguez, Angelica Caro, Cinzia Cappiello and Ismael Caballero. A BPMN extension for including data quality requirements in business process modeling 

Call for Papers (up)

BACKGROUND (up)

The Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) standard experiences a huge uptake in both academia and industry. It is seen by many as the de-facto standard for business process modeling, analysis, and execution. Its promise of being one language for Business and IT has made it very popular with business analysts, tool vendors, practitioners, and end users. Dozens of standard implementations are listed on the OMG website. 
 
After three successful workshops in Vienna, Austria, Potsdam, Germany, Lucerne, Switzerland, this fourth workshop brings together researchers and practitioners to discuss and present the latest developments around BPMN. 

TOPICS (up)

We invite researchers and practitioners to contribute to the workshop on practical and theoretical aspects of the BPMN standard, addressing or going beyond one of the following topics: 
 
Analysis of BPMN models 
  • Consistency between BPMN collaboration, conversation, and choreography models  
  • Similarity of BPMN models 
  • Matching elements of different BPMN models 
  • Verification of BPMN models 
BPMN as a modeling language  
  • Process modeling methodologies  
  • Modeling extensions and language profiles  
  • Integration with other modeling languages and language comparisons  
  • Quality of BPMN models and of BPMN as a notation 
Practical experience with BPMN  
  • Success factors of business process management with BPMN  
  • Addressing the need of different stakeholder and specific industries in BPMN  
  • BPMN beyond modeling: process reengineering and optimization  
  • Bridging the Business-IT gap: Does BPMN deliver on its promise?  
BPMN tool support 
  • Implementation and semantics of BPMN as an execution language 
  • Collaborative modeling  
  • Managing repositories of BPMN models 
  • Simulation based on BPMN models 
BPMN for business analysis  
  • Usability and understanding of BPMN diagrams  
  • Process optimization  
  • Process monitoring and improvement  
  • BPMN and its relation to Enterprise Architecture  
Empirical research on BPMN  
  • BPMN in specific industries and e-government  
  • User experience studies  
  • Quality aspects of BPMN tools (smart editors, simulators, runtimes, monitoring environments)  
Future directions of BPMN  

IMPORTANT DATES (up)

  • Paper submission deadline: 22 May 2012  
  • Author notification: 15 June 2012  
  • Camera-ready copy: 27 June 2012  

CONTRIBUTIONS AND SUBMISSION PROCEDURE (up)

We invite two types of contributions to the workshop: full scientific papers and short papers. 
 
Full scientific papers must present unpublished work that is not being considered in another forum, but can present unfinished research. They should clearly establish their research contribution and relation to previous research. Authors are requested to prepare submissions in English of no more than 15 pages.  
 
Short papers of no more than 6 pages can be submitted for inclusion in the paper proceedings. Short papers can be practical experience reports or tool demos.  
 
All papers must be formatted in English following the «Springer LNBIP instructions» for authors. Electronic submission of manuscripts (in PDF) is required «using EasyChair». Submitted papers will be evaluated by an international program committee on the basis of their significance to the workshop topics, originality, and technical quality. 
 
Papers selected for this workshop will be published in Springer's Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing (LNBIP). At least one author is required to attend the workshop and present the paper. Presentations and demos will be listed with title and abstract in the workshop brochure. Presentations of the speakers selected for the workshop will be video-recorded and speeches will be available on the workshop webpage after the workshop depending on agreement of the speakers to the publication of their speeches. 

ORGANISATION (up)

Program Co-Chairs 
 
  • Jan Mendling, WU Vienna, Austria 
  • Matthias Weidlich, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel 
Local Organization 
 
  • Katharina Disselbacher-Kollmann 
  • Stefanie Errath 
 
Program Committee 
 
  • Agnes Koschmider, KIT, Germany  
  • Alexander Luebbe, HPI, University of Potsdam, Germany  
  • Alistair Barros, Queensland University of Technology, Australia  
  • Andreas Oberweis, KIT, Germany  
  • Andreas Gadatsch, Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg, Germany  
  • Artem Polyvyanyy, HPI, University of Potsdam, Germany  
  • Barbara Weber, University of Innsbruck, Austria  
  • Bela Mutschler, HS Ravensburg-Weingarten, Germany  
  • Chun Ouyang, QUT Brisbane, Australia  
  • Denis Gagné, Trisotech, Canada  
  • Diogo R. Ferreira, Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal 
  • Dirk Fahland, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands  
  • Felix Garcia, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain  
  • Frank Michael Kraft, SAP, Germany  
  • Frank Puhlmann, inubit, Germany  
  • Gero Decker, Signavio GmbH, Germany 
  • Gregor Scheithauer, Opitz Consulting, Germany 
  • Hagen Völzer, IBM Research Zurich, Switzerland  
  • Hajo Reijers, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands  
  • Henrik Leopold, HU Berlin, Germany 
  • Jan Recker, QUT Brisbane, Australia 
  • Jana Koehler, Lucerne University, Switzerland 
  • Karsten Wolf, University of Rostock, Germany  
  • Luciano García-Bañuelos, University of Tartu, Estonia  
  • Lucineia Thom, University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil  
  • Manfred Reichert, University of Ulm, Germany  
  • Marco Brambilla, Politecnico di Milano, Italy 
  • Markus Nüttgens, University of Hamburg, Germany  
  • Marlon Dumas, University of Tartu, Estonia  
  • Marta Indulska, Queensland University, Australia  
  • Mathias Weske, HPI, University of Potsdam, Germany  
  • Niels Lohmann, University of Rostock, Germany  
  • Oliver Kopp, University of Stuttgart, Germany  
  • Peter Wong, Fredhopper, The Netherlands  
  • Philip Effinger, University of Tübingen, Germany 
  • Pnina Soffer, University of Haifa, Israel  
  • Ralf Laue, University of Applied Sciences Zwickau, Germany 
  • Remco Dijkman, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands  
  • Sergey Smirnov, SAP Research, Germany 
  • Stefanie Rinderle-Ma, University of Vienna, Austria  
  • Stephen White, IBM, USA  
  • Susanne Patig, University of Berne, Switzerland  
  • Thomas Allweyer, University of Applied Sciences Kaiserslautern, Germany  
Letzte Änderung: 02.07.2012, 17:04 | 975 Worte