BP-Meet-IoT

6th International Workshop on BP-Meet-IoT
(affiliated with BPM 2022)

The Business Process Management (BPM) discipline, as it is known today, emerged as the result of significant advances experienced since mid-1990s in business methods, tools, standards, and technology. Since then, this discipline has significantly evolved but mainly focused on the business domain with the objective of helping organizations to achieve their goals. However, the arrival of the Internet of Things (IoT) has put into play a huge amount of interconnected and embedded computing devices with sensing and actuating capabilities that are revolutionizing our way of living. The incorporation of this technology into the BPM field will allow the development of business processes (BPs) with higher levels of flexibility, efficiency, and responsiveness, providing as a result a better support to the evolving business requirements. In addition, the proper combination of these two fields can foster the development of innovative solutions not only in the business domain where the BPM emerged, but also in many different application areas in which the IoT can be applied (e.g., smart cities, smart agriculture, or e-health).

While the incorporation of IoT technology into the BPM field has plenty of potentials, it also imposes a set of challenges that need to be addressed. In particular, research is necessary for addressing questions such as:

  • Which is the impact of introducing IoT technology into the BPM lifecycle?
  • How the top-down and bottom-up paradigms in which BPM and IoT rely on respectively can coexist and benefit each other when merged?
  • How to bridge the gap between the low and the high-level in which IoT and BPM operate respectively?
  • How BPM will deal with the changing nature imposed by IoT technology?
  • How real-time communication and collaboration required in IoT systems will be supported by BPM?
  • How to consider privacy aspects into data captured by IoT devices and analyzed with BPM?
  • How BPM can be used to model behavior in IoT systems?

The objective of this workshop is twofold. On the one hand we want to attract novel research at the intersection of these two areas by bringing together practitioners and researchers from both communities that are interested in making IoT-based business processes a reality. BP-Meet-IoT will discuss the current state of ongoing research, industry needs, future trends, and practical experiences. The topics of the workshop include, but are not limited to:

  • Modeling IoT-enhanced BPs
  • Dealing with context in IoT-enhanced BPs
  • Privacy and security in IoT-enhanced BPs
  • Improving resource monitoring and quality of task execution
  • IoT and ubiquitous technologies supporting BPM
  • Sensor-based task management in BPM
  • Business examples of IoT technologies applied to BPs
  • Bridging the gap between the low and high level in which IoT and BPM operate
  • Visual Analytics of behavior for IoT BPs
  • IoT-enhanced process model discovery, recognition, monitoring and prediction
  • Process anomaly detection from IoT dataExecution of IoT-enhanced BPs
  • Architectures for IoT BPs

Furthermore, we want to foster more practical-point-of-view solutions provided for real scenarios. For this purpose, we propose to raise two challenges, namely an IoT-aware BP modelling challenge and an IoT process mining challenge.

The winner of each challenge will receive a prize certificate. In addition, winners and the best paper of the workshop will be invited to submit their contributions to our special issue IoT-Based BPM for Smart Environments in the Future Internet journal.

Manifesto

Some of the topics pointed out in this workshop have been already discussed in the manifesto entitled "The Internet-of-Things Meets Business Process Management: Mutual Benefits and Challenges”. This manifesto has been published by the organizers of this workshop together with the growing up BPM-IoT community as a result from the "Fresh Approaches to Business Process Modeling"(16191) seminar held in Dagstuhl in May 2016.

Program

The agenda workshop will be the following:

09:00-09:15 Opening
09:15-10:30 Contexts and Context-awareness for BPM.
Invited Keynote Dr. Juan Carlos Augusto
10:30-11:00 Method to Identify Process Activities by Visualizing Sensor Events.
Paper by Flemming Weyers, Ronny Seiger and Barbara Weber.
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-12:00 A Holistic Framework for IoT-Aware Business Processes.
Paper by Yusuf Kirikkayis, Florian Gallik and Manfred Reichert.
12:00-12:30 vAMoS: eVent Abstraction via Motifs Search.
Paper by Gemma Di Federico and Andrea Burattin.
12:30-13:00 Assessing the suitability of traditional event log standards for IoT-enhanced event logs.
Paper by Yannis Bertrand, Jochen De Weerdt and Estefanía Serral.
13:00-14:30 Lunch
14:30-16:00 Open discussion
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-17:30 Wrap-up

Important Dates

  • Paper & Challenge submission deadline: June 5, 2022 June 13, 2022
  • Authors notification: July 6, 2022 July 13, 2022
  • Camera-ready: July 16, 2022
  • Workshop date: September 13, 2022

Submissions & Registration

Manuscripts (research and industrial papers) submission

Manuscripts should be no longer than 12 pages including references, figures and tables and must be formatted in accordance with the LNCS/LNBIP format specified by Springer (available for both LaTeX and MS Word).

The title page must contain a short abstract and a short list of keywords. Papers should be submitted electronically through easychair by selecting the 6th International Workshop on Business Processes Meet the Internet-of Things track.

Relevant members of the international community working on IoT and BPM topics will review all submissions. Each paper will be reviewed by 3 PC members in order to guarantee that only high-quality papers are accepted. All the workshop papers will be published by Springer as a post-proceeding volume (to be sent around 4 months after the workshop) in their Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing (LNBIP) series.

It is mandatory that at least one author will register and present the paper during the workshop.

Reports for the BP-meets-IoT Challenge

The submitted reports are judged on their level of professionalism and originality of the results. The participants are expected to report on a broad range of aspects. The reports will be judged on their completeness of analysis and usefulness for the purpose of a real-life smart environment. Submissions should be made through EasyChair at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bpm2022 where you indicate your submission to be a BP-Meet-IoT submission. A submission should contain a pdf report of at most 25 pages, including figures, using the LNCS/LNBIP format specified by Springer (available for both LaTeX and MS Word). The title should clearly mention the submission is for the Challenge. Appendices may be included, but should only support the main text. All reports submitted should be presented at the workshop (having a registered participant) through a poster. The committee will review the report and select the best ones to have a presentation of their approach and answer the audience questions in a specific session of the workshop. On the basis of the committee reviews and the opinion of the workshop audience, the winner will be selected.

Participating in the BP-Meets-IoT Challenge

The 6th edition of the BP-Meets-IoT Workshop launches a challenge aiming at exploring the interplay between the Internet of Things (IoT) and process mining. This year's challenge focuses on smart environments. The challenge provides participants with multiple possible datasets divided in two categories:

  • Real-world (not BP based) smart home datasets widely used in the smart home and ambient intelligence community.
  • A realistic set of simulated logs of a smart home describe habits, activities and actions and habits performed by humans inside a physical environment, together with the sensor measurements detected. Simulated logs are obtained from documented human processes, provided with the challenge.

Participants are required to analyze these logs focusing on extracting habits and other unique insights on the personal process(es) of the home inhabitants. Please, download here the complete description of datasets.

We strongly encourage participants to use any tools, techniques, methods at their disposal. There is no need to restrict to open-source tools; proprietary tools as well as techniques developed or implemented specifically for this challenge are also welcome.

The challenge is quite open. The main question to be answered is whether there is a collection of process models which together properly describe the habits of the inhabitants. Any collection of models that together explain the habits of all the inhabitants is appreciated. In addition, details on the habits and inhabitants which can be derived from the dataset, for each of the three scenarios, contribute to the completeness of the answer.

Any participant team can apply to the challenge, including Bachelor, Master and PhD students, as well as academics and professionals, also in teams (of any composition) to show their skills in analyzing habits and demonstrating how process mining can be applied in smart environments.

Program Committee

  • Adrian Mos, Naver LABS, Grenoble, France
  • Andrea Delgado, INCO, Universidad de la República, Uruguay
  • Andreas Oberweis, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
  • Claudio di Ciccio, Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy
  • Faruk Hasic, KU Leuven, Belgium
  • Felix Mannhardt, SINTEF Digital, Norway
  • Jan Mendling, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
  • Jianwen Su, University of California at Santa Barbara, USA
  • Juan Manuel Murillo, University of Extremadura, Spain
  • Mathias Weske, Hasso-Plattner-Institut at the University of Potsdam, Germany
  • Pnina Soffer, University of Haifa, Israel
  • Sylvain Cherrier, University Marne-la-Vallée, France
  • Udo Kannengießer, Compunity GmbH, Germany
  • Vicente Pelechano, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain
  • Zakaria Maamar, Zayed University, Dubai, UAE