scholarly journals Rule-based Business Process Abstraction Framework

Author(s):  
Aphrodite Tsalgatidou ◽  
Christina Tsagkani
Keyword(s):  
2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose Felipe Mejia Bernal ◽  
Maurizio Morisio
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Sanghyun Yoo ◽  
Yo-han Roh ◽  
In-Chul Song ◽  
Joo Hyuk Jeon ◽  
Myoung Ho Kim ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Gang Xue ◽  
Zhongwei Wu ◽  
Kun Zhang ◽  
Shaowen Yao

Up to the present, the modeling of business process manly focuses on the flow-control perspective, regardless of the logic relationships between models. Although the value of business rules in business process modeling has been recognized by many organizations, it is not fully clear how business rules can be used to model business process models. Business rules are powerful representation forms that can potentially define the semantics of business process models and business vocabulary. This chapter is committed to model the business process based on SBVR, then use the method mentioned below to transform a plain text rule statement into BPMN files.


Author(s):  
Khadhir Bekki ◽  
Hafida Belachir

This article proposes a flexible way in business process modeling and managing. Today, business process needs to be more flexible and adaptable. The regulations and policies in organizations, as origins of change, are often expressed in terms of business rules. The ECA (Event-condition-action) rule is a popular way to incorporate flexibility into a process design. To raise the flexibility in the business processes, the authors consider governing any business activity through ECA rules based on business rules. For adaptability, the separation of concerns supports adaptation in several ways. To cope with flexibility and adaptability, the authors propose a new multi concern rule based model. For each concern, each business rule is formalized using their CECAPENETE formalism (Concern -Event-Condition-Action-Post condition- check Execution- Number of check -Else-Trigger-else Event). Then, the rules based process is translated into a graph of rules that is analyzed in terms of relations between concerns, reliably and flexibility.


Author(s):  
Diana Sola ◽  
Christian Meilicke ◽  
Han van der Aa ◽  
Heiner Stuckenschmidt

2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 171-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dat C. Ma ◽  
Maria E. Orlowska ◽  
Shazia W. Sadiq

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