ter Hofstede / van der Aalst / Adams | Modern Business Process Automation | E-Book | www.sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 676 Seiten, eBook

ter Hofstede / van der Aalst / Adams Modern Business Process Automation

YAWL and its Support Environment
2010
ISBN: 978-3-642-03121-2
Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark

YAWL and its Support Environment

E-Book, Englisch, 676 Seiten, eBook

ISBN: 978-3-642-03121-2
Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark



The ?eld of Business Process Management (BPM) is marred by a seemingly e- less sequence of (proposed) industry standards. Contrary to other ?elds (e.g., civil or electronic engineering), these standards are not the result of a widely supported consolidationofwell-understoodandwell-establishedconceptsandpractices.Inthe BPM domain, it is frequently the case that BPM vendors opportunistically become involved in the creation of proposed standards to exert or maintain their in?uence and interests in the ?eld. Despite the initial fervor associated with such standardi- tion activities, it is no less frequent that vendors either choose to drop their support for standards that they earlier championed on an opportunistic basis or elect only to partially support them in their commercial offerings. Moreover, the results of the standardization processes themselves are a concern. BPM standards tend to deal with complex concepts, yet they are never properly de?ned and all-too-often not informed by established research. The result is a plethoraof languagesand tools, with no consensuson conceptsand their implem- tation. They also fail to provide clear direction in the way in which BPM standards should evolve. One can also observe a dichotomy between the “business” side of BPM and its “technical” side. While it is clear that the application of BPM will fail if not placed in a proper business context, it is equally clear that its application will go nowhere if it remains merely a motivational exercise with schemas of business processes hanging on the wall gathering dust.

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Zielgruppe


Professional/practitioner

Weitere Infos & Material


Part I: Introduction
1) Introduction

Part II: Concepts
2) The Language: Rationale and Fundamentals - 3) Advanced Synchronization

Part III: Flexibility and Change
4) Dynamic Workflows - 5) Exception Handling - 6) Declarative Workflow

Part IV: The Core System
7) The Architecture - 8) The Design Environment - 9) The Runtime Environment

Part V: Services
10) The Resource Service - 11) The Worket Service - 12) The Declare Service

Part VI: Positioning
13) The Business Process Modeling Notation - 14) Event-Driven Process Chains - 15) The Business Process Executable Language - 16) Open Source Workflow Systems

Part VII: Advanced Topics
17) Process Mining and Simulation - 18) Process Configuration - 19) Process Integration - 20) Verification

Part VIII: Case Studies
21) YAWL4Healthcare - 22) YAWL4Film

Part IX: Epilogue
23) Epilogue

Part X: Appendices
A) The Order Fulfillment Process - B) Mathematical Notation - C) The Original Workflow Patterns


Arthur H.M. ter Hofstede, PhD, is a Professor at Queensland University of Technology. He is an original contributor to the well-known workflow patterns as well as a codesigner of the YAWL language and manager of the development of its open-source support environment. Wil M.P. van der Aalst, PhD, is a Professor at Eindhoven University of Technology and an Adjunct Professor at Queensland University of Technology. He is coauthor of the textbook Workflow Management: Models, Methods, and Systems and editor of several other books in the areas of Business Process Management and Petri nets. Michael Adams, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer at Queensland University of Technology. He has developed the concepts of Worklets and Exlets to deal with workflow evolution and unexpected exceptions in YAWL. In addition, he is currently the technical lead of the YAWL support environment. Nick Russell, PhD, is a Postdoctoral Researcher at Eindhoven University of Technology. He has conducted extensive research in the area of workflow patterns leading to collections of control-flow, data, resource and exception handling patterns. This work formed the basis for newYAWL and the solutions to resource and exception handling in YAWL 2.0.



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