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Dagstuhl Seminar 98271

Petri Nets and Business Process Management

( Jul 06 – Jul 10, 1998 )

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Please use the following short url to reference this page: https://www.dagstuhl.de/98271

Organizers
  • A. Oberweis (Frankfurt)
  • G. Rozenberg (Leiden)
  • J. Desel (Karlsruhe)
  • W. Reisig (HU-Berlin)




Motivation

The management of business processes comprises their planning, specification, modeling, analysis and computer-supported execution. Current trends in information technology such as workflow management systems or packaged software systems indicate the increasing importance of a systematic approach to business process management. Many graphical notations are in everyday use for business modeling purposes, usually resembling some version of data flow diagrams. Often, the lack of formal semantics and methodological support limits their computer-based analysis and execution. In most cases, the design and the improvement of business processes in industrial applications does with intuition and experience of experts only.

Petri nets have been in use as a graphical modelling technique for more than 30 years. Mathematical analysis techniques allow for analytical verification of many relevant properties of systems' behaviour. Petri nets nevertheless are seldom used in business applications. Even the few commercially available Petri net based software development tools exploit Petri net theory to a very limited extend only. There is an apparent gap between practical needs of business process management in industry and theoretical investigations of Petri nets in the academic sector.

Recently, different variants of Petri nets have been suggested for various purposes in the context of business processes: As a reference language for the semantics of other, formal or semi-formal modeling languages, or as a means to compare and relate different modeling languages, or as a tool to execute process models, e.g. in order to check reachability of distinguished states.

The seminar is dedicated to the central problems of this area:

  • Which specific requirements for modeling languages arise in the area of business process management and workflow management (e.g. related to office documents, organizational dependencies of tasks, cost, time and quality aspects)?
  • How can the analytical and methodological potential of Petri nets be exploited for business process management?
  • Which requirements are not met by classical Petri net models? Which extensions of the model are sensible or necessary?
  • Will Petri nets eventually play a role for business process modeling which compares to today's role of the relational model for data modeling? Will there develop a normalizing theory for business processes similar to the normalization theory of relational data bases?
  • May Petri nets formally link application oriented modeling languages to particular workflow programming languages?

Those questions will be attacked at the seminar by participants from various research and application areas, including Petri Nets, Business Process Modeling, Workflow Management, Software and Information System Engineering.


Participants
  • A. Oberweis (Frankfurt)
  • G. Rozenberg (Leiden)
  • J. Desel (Karlsruhe)
  • W. Reisig (HU-Berlin)