We address the problem of diagnosing behavioral differences between pairs of business process models. Specifically, given two process models, we seek to determine if they are behaviorally equivalent, and if not, we seek to describe their differences in terms of behavioral relations captured in one model but not in the other. The proposed solution is based on a translation from process models to Asymmetric Event Structures (AES). A naïve version of this translation suffers from two limitations. First, it produces redundant difference diagnostic statements because an AES may contain unnecessary event duplication. Second, it is not applicable to process models with cycles. To tackle the first limitation, we propose a technique to reduce event duplication in an AES while preserving canonicity. For the second limitation, we propose a notion of unfolding that captures all possible causes of each event in a cycle. From there we derive an AES where repeated events are distinguished from non-repeated ones and that allows us to diagnose differences in terms of repetition and causal relations in one model but not in the other.

Behavioral Comparison of Process Models Based on Canonically Reduced Event Structures

BALDAN, PAOLO;
2014

Abstract

We address the problem of diagnosing behavioral differences between pairs of business process models. Specifically, given two process models, we seek to determine if they are behaviorally equivalent, and if not, we seek to describe their differences in terms of behavioral relations captured in one model but not in the other. The proposed solution is based on a translation from process models to Asymmetric Event Structures (AES). A naïve version of this translation suffers from two limitations. First, it produces redundant difference diagnostic statements because an AES may contain unnecessary event duplication. Second, it is not applicable to process models with cycles. To tackle the first limitation, we propose a technique to reduce event duplication in an AES while preserving canonicity. For the second limitation, we propose a notion of unfolding that captures all possible causes of each event in a cycle. From there we derive an AES where repeated events are distinguished from non-repeated ones and that allows us to diagnose differences in terms of repetition and causal relations in one model but not in the other.
2014
Business Process Management 2014
9783319101712
9783319101729
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3059504
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