22 research outputs found
Partial-order-based process mining: a survey and outlook
The field of process mining focuses on distilling knowledge of the (historical) execution of a process based on the operational event data generated and stored during its execution. Most existing process mining techniques assume that the event data describe activity executions as degenerate time intervals, i.e., intervals of the form [t, t], yielding a strict total order on the observed activity instances. However, for various practical use cases, e.g., the logging of activity executions with a nonzero duration and uncertainty on the correctness of the recorded timestamps of the activity executions, assuming a partial order on the observed activity instances is more appropriate. Using partial orders to represent process executions, i.e., based on recorded event data, allows for new classes of process mining algorithms, i.e., aware of parallelism and robust to uncertainty. Yet, interestingly, only a limited number of studies consider using intermediate data abstractions that explicitly assume a partial order over a collection of observed activity instances. Considering recent developments in process mining, e.g., the prevalence of high-quality event data and techniques for event data abstraction, the need for algorithms designed to handle partially ordered event data is expected to grow in the upcoming years. Therefore, this paper presents a survey of process mining techniques that explicitly use partial orders to represent recorded process behavior. We performed a keyword search, followed by a snowball sampling strategy, yielding 68 relevant articles in the field. We observe a recent uptake in works covering partial-order-based process mining, e.g., due to the current trend of process mining based on uncertain event data. Furthermore, we outline promising novel research directions for the use of partial orders in the context of process mining algorithms
Repairing Alignments of Process Models
Process mining represents a collection of data driven techniques that support the analysis, understanding and improvement of business processes. A core branch of process mining is conformance checking, i.e., assessing to what extent a business process model conforms to observed business process execution data. Alignments are the de facto standard instrument to compute such conformance statistics. However, computing alignments is a combinatorial problem and hence extremely costly. At the same time, many process models share a similar structure and/or a great deal of behavior. For collections of such models, computing alignments from scratch is inefficient, since large parts of the alignments are likely to be the same. This paper presents a technique that exploits process model similarity and repairs existing alignments by updating those parts that do not fit a given process model. The technique effectively reduces the size of the combinatorial alignment problem, and hence decreases computation time significantly. Moreover, the potential loss of optimality is limited and stays within acceptable bounds
Event Log Sampling for Predictive Monitoring
Predictive process monitoring is a subfield of process mining that aims to
estimate case or event features for running process instances. Such predictions
are of significant interest to the process stakeholders. However,
state-of-the-art methods for predictive monitoring require the training of
complex machine learning models, which is often inefficient. This paper
proposes an instance selection procedure that allows sampling training process
instances for prediction models. We show that our sampling method allows for a
significant increase of training speed for next activity prediction methods
while maintaining reliable levels of prediction accuracy.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 4 tables, 34 reference
Translating Workflow Nets to Process Trees : An Algorithmic Approach
Since their introduction, process trees have been frequently used as a process modeling formalism in many process mining algorithms. A process tree is a (mathematical) tree-based model of a process, in which internal vertices represent behavioral control-flow relations and leaves represent process activities. Translation of a process tree into a sound workflow net is trivial. However, the reverse is not the case. Simultaneously, an algorithm that translates a WF-net into a process tree is of great interest, e.g., the explicit knowledge of the control-flow hierarchy in a WF-net allows one to reason on its behavior more easily. Hence, in this paper, we present such an algorithm, i.e., it detects whether a WF-net corresponds to a process tree, and, if so, constructs it. We prove that, if the algorithm finds a process tree, the language of the process tree is equal to the language of the original WF-net. The experiments conducted show that the algorithm’s corresponding implementation has a quadratic time complexity in the size of the WF-net. Furthermore, the experiments show strong evidence of process tree rediscoverability.</p
Using Multi-Level Information in Hierarchical Process Mining: Balancing Behavioural Quality and Model Complexity
Process mining techniques aim to derive knowledge of the execution of processes, by means of automated analysis of behaviour recorded in event logs. A well-known challenge in process mining is to strike an adequate balance between the behavioural quality of a discovered model compared to the event log and the model’s complexity as perceived by stakeholders. At the same time, events typically contain multiple attributes related to parts of the process at different levels of abstraction, which are often ignored by existing process mining techniques, resulting in either highly complex and/or incomprehensible process mining results. This paper addresses this problem by extending process mining to use event-level attributes readily available in event logs. We introduce (1) the concept of multi-level logs and generalise existing hierarchical process models, which support multiple modelling formalisms and notions of activities in a single model, (2) a framework, instantiation and implementation for process discovery of hierarchical models, and (3) a corresponding conformance checking technique. The resulting framework has been implemented as a plug-in of the open-source process mining framework ProM, and has been evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively using multiple real-life event logs