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This book presents a proposal for designing business process
management (BPM) systems that comprise much more than just process
modelling. Based on a purified Business Process Model and Notation
(BPMN) variant, the authors present proposals for several important
issues in BPM that have not been adequately considered in the BPMN
2.0 standard. It focusses on modality as well as actor and user
interaction modelling and offers an enhanced communication concept.
In order to render models executable, the semantics of the
modelling language needs to be described rigorously enough to
prevent deviating interpretations by different tools. For this
reason, the semantics of the necessary concepts introduced in this
book are defined using the Abstract State Machine (ASM) method.
Finally, the authors show how the different parts of the model fit
together using a simple example process, and introduce the enhanced
Process Platform (eP2) architecture, which binds all the different
components together. The resulting method is named Hagenberg
Business Process Modelling (H-BPM) after the Austrian village where
it was designed. The motivation for the development of the H-BPM
method stems from several industrial projects in which business
analysts and software developers struggled with redundancies and
inconsistencies in system documentation due to missing integration.
The book is aimed at researchers in business process management and
industry 4.0 as well as advanced professionals in these areas.
This book provides the most complete formal specification of the
semantics of the Business Process Model and Notation 2.0 standard
(BPMN) available to date, in a style that is easily understandable
for a wide range of readers - not only for experts in formal
methods, but e.g. also for developers of modeling tools, software
architects, or graduate students specializing in business process
management. BPMN - issued by the Object Management Group - is a
widely used standard for business process modeling. However, major
drawbacks of BPMN include its limited support for organizational
modeling, its only implicit expression of modalities, and its lack
of integrated user interaction and data modeling. Further, in many
cases the syntactical and, in particular, semantic definitions of
BPMN are inaccurate, incomplete or inconsistent. The book addresses
concrete issues concerning the execution semantics of business
processes and provides a formal definition of BPMN process
diagrams, which can serve as a sound basis for further extensions,
i.e., in the form of horizontal refinements of the core language.
To this end, the Abstract State Machine (ASMs) method is used to
formalize the semantics of BPMN. ASMs have demonstrated their value
in various domains, e.g. specifying the semantics of programming or
modeling languages, verifying the specification of the Java Virtual
Machine, or formalizing the ITIL change management process. This
kind of improvement promotes more consistency in the interpretation
of comprehensive models, as well as real exchangeability of models
between different tools. In the outlook at the end of the book, the
authors conclude with proposing extensions that address actor
modeling (including an intuitive way to denote permissions and
obligations), integration of user-centric views, a refined
communication concept, and data integration.
This book presents a proposal for designing business process
management (BPM) systems that comprise much more than just process
modelling. Based on a purified Business Process Model and Notation
(BPMN) variant, the authors present proposals for several important
issues in BPM that have not been adequately considered in the BPMN
2.0 standard. It focusses on modality as well as actor and user
interaction modelling and offers an enhanced communication concept.
In order to render models executable, the semantics of the
modelling language needs to be described rigorously enough to
prevent deviating interpretations by different tools. For this
reason, the semantics of the necessary concepts introduced in this
book are defined using the Abstract State Machine (ASM) method.
Finally, the authors show how the different parts of the model fit
together using a simple example process, and introduce the enhanced
Process Platform (eP2) architecture, which binds all the different
components together. The resulting method is named Hagenberg
Business Process Modelling (H-BPM) after the Austrian village where
it was designed. The motivation for the development of the H-BPM
method stems from several industrial projects in which business
analysts and software developers struggled with redundancies and
inconsistencies in system documentation due to missing integration.
The book is aimed at researchers in business process management and
industry 4.0 as well as advanced professionals in these areas.
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