Book Chapter10.1007/978-1-84996-199-8_11
Deriving Event Graphs through Process Mining for Runtime Change Management
Hongyu Zhang,Yong Liu,Cong Li,R. Jiao +3 more
- 01 Jan 2010
- pp 127-138
2
TL;DR: Engineering Changes (ECs) refer to any modifications in forms, fits, functions, materials, services and so on in product design, development and the subsequent manufacturing operations.
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Abstract: Engineering Changes (ECs) refer to any modifications in forms, fits, functions, materials, services and so on in product design, development and the subsequent manufacturing operations. In a broad sense, EC is an alteration made to parts, drawings or softwares that have already been released during the product design process. The change can be of any size or type. The change process can involve any number of people and can take any length of time (Jarratt, 2004). Business changes, organisational changes, schedule changes, order changes and so on are not directly related to product design and therefore are not usually considered as ECs. However, they may be consequences of ECs or they may become the dominating causes for ECs. In practice, any ECs occurring after the design which are approved and released are referred to as late changes. On the contrary, any ECs triggered before the design is approved and released are named early changes. Late ECs are much more costly and time-consuming to implement than early changes. The best approach in managing ECs is to avoid them as far as possible. However, ECs are often deemed indispensable in many real scenarios. Thus, it has become a research issue as to how ECs can be managed effectively and efficiently.
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Citations
Understanding task structure in DSM: Mining dependency using process event logs
Lijun Lan,Ying Liu,Han Tong Loh +2 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: A flexible approach to mine dependency from process event logs which dynamically record the detailed information of task execution in a real context is proposed which can be steadily discovered and derived by focusing on different subsets of data for specific purposes.
Workflow simulation for operational decision support using event graph through process mining
Ying Liu,Hui Zhang,Chunping Li,Roger J. Jiao +3 more
- 01 Feb 2012
TL;DR: This paper has proposed a generic approach of BPS for operational decision support which includes business processes modeling and workflow simulation with the models generated and experimental results show that the proposed approach is able to model business processes using event graphs and simulate the processes for common operational decisions.
References
Workflow mining: a survey of issues and approaches
W.M.P. van der Aalst,B. F. van Dongen,Joachim Herbst,Laura Maruster,G. Schimm,A.J.M.M. Weijters +5 more
- 01 Nov 2003
TL;DR: This paper introduces the concept of workflow mining and presents a common format for workflow logs, and discusses the most challenging problems and present some of the workflow mining approaches available today.
WEKA: a machine learning workbench
Geoffrey Holmes,A. Donkin,Ian H. Witten +2 more
- 29 Nov 1994
TL;DR: WEKA is a workbench for machine learning that is intended to aid in the application of machine learning techniques to a variety of real-world problems, in particular, those arising from agricultural and horticultural domains.
•Journal Article
Mining process models from workflow logs
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an approach for a system that constructs process models from logs of past, unstructured executions of the given process, which conforms to the dependencies and put executions present in the log.
784
Simulation modeling with event graphs
TL;DR: This research was partially supported by National Science Foundation Grant ECS-8023177 and may be adapted for use in teaching and research.
365
A model for change propagation based on graph rewriting
Vaclav Rajlich
- 01 Oct 1997
TL;DR: A model of change propagation during software maintenance and evolution as a sequence of snapshots, where each snapshot represents one particular moment in the process, with some software dependencies being consistent and others being inconsistent is presented.
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