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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Business Process Model Merging: An Approach to Business Process Consolidation

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TLDR
An algorithm for computing merged models and an algorithm for extracting digests from a merged model are presented, which show that the merging algorithm produces compact models and scales up to process models containing hundreds of nodes.
Abstract
This article addresses the problem of constructing consolidated business process models out of collections of process models that share common fragments. The article considers the construction of unions of multiple models (called merged models) as well as intersections (called digests). Merged models are intended for analysts who wish to create a model that subsumes a collection of process models -- typically representing variants of the same underlying process -- with the aim of replacing the variants with the merged model. Digests, on the other hand, are intended for analysts who wish to identify the most recurring fragments across a collection of process models, so that they can focus their efforts on optimizing these fragments. The article presents an algorithm for computing merged models and an algorithm for extracting digests from a merged model. The merging and digest extraction algorithms have been implemented and tested against collections of process models taken from multiple application domains. The tests show that the merging algorithm produces compact models and scales up to process models containing hundreds of nodes. Furthermore, a case study conducted in a large insurance company has demonstrated the usefulness of the merging and digest extraction operators in a practical setting.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Method Based on a New Word Embedding Approach for Process Model Matching

TL;DR: The results showed that the proposed method shared the first place with RMM/NHCM and OPBOT tools and can be effective in matching process models.
Book ChapterDOI

Structural and Behavioral Biases in Process Comparison Using Models and Logs

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural distance between two process models does not always reflect the behavioral distance between the underlying event logs and thus structural comparison should be applied with care, and the authors investigate relations between structural and behavioral process distances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clone detection for business process models

TL;DR: This study has extended SAMOS (Statistical Analysis of Models) framework for clone detection of business process models, and presents the underlying techniques utilized in the framework, as well as the approach in extending the framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breadth First Search Sequence based Method for Efficient Process Retrieval

TL;DR: A new method is put forward, which first utilizes the breadth first search (BFS) algorithm to label the pro cess model, and then calculates the similarity based on the matching distance, which is suitable for fuzzy retrieval.

Introducing Configurability into Scenario-Based Specification of Business Processes.

TL;DR: This paper takes a look at how configurability and scenario-based specification could be merged in one approach, and particularly focuses on the impact of permitting events in scenarios to be hidden or blocked.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of approaches to automatic schema matching

TL;DR: A taxonomy is presented that distinguishes between schema-level and instance-level, element- level and structure- level, and language-based and constraint-based matchers and is intended to be useful when comparing different approaches to schema matching, when developing a new match algorithm, and when implementing a schema matching component.
Book

Data Compression: The Complete Reference

TL;DR: Detailed descriptions and explanations of the most well-known and frequently used compression methods are covered in a self-contained fashion, with an accessible style and technical level for specialists and nonspecialists.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Similarity flooding: a versatile graph matching algorithm and its application to schema matching

TL;DR: This paper presents a matching algorithm based on a fixpoint computation that is usable across different scenarios and conducts a user study, in which the accuracy metric was used to estimate the labor savings that the users could obtain by utilizing the algorithm to obtain an initial matching.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

WordNet::Similarity: measuring the relatedness of concepts

TL;DR: WordNet::Similarity as mentioned in this paper is a Perl package that makes it possible to measure the semantic similarity and relatedness between a pair of concepts (or synsets) using WordNet.
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