Title of article
Configuration vs. adaptation for business process variant maintenance: An empirical study
Author/Authors
Markus D?hring، نويسنده , , Hajo A. Reijers، نويسنده , , Sergey Smirnov، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
26
From page
108
To page
133
Abstract
Many approaches for process variant management employ a reference model for deriving a target variant either using configuration or adaptation mechanisms. What is missing at this stage is empirical insight into their relative strengths and weaknesses. Our paper addresses this gap. We selected C-YAWL and vBPMN for a comparative, empirical user study. Both approaches center on a reference process, but provide different types of configuration and adaptation mechanisms as well as modularization support. Along with this aspect, we investigate the effect of model complexity and professional level on human process variant modeling performance. Given unlimited processing time, we could not show that complexity or the participantʹs professional level significantly impacts the task success rate or user contentment. Yet, an effect of model complexity can be noted on the execution speed for typical variant maintenance tasks like the insertion and deletion of process steps. For each of the performance measures of success rate, user contentment and execution speed, vBPMN performs significantly better than C-YAWL. We argue that this is due to vBPMNʹs advanced modularization support in terms of pattern-based process adaptations to construct process variants. These insights are valuable for advancing existing modeling approaches and selecting between them.
Keywords
process configuration , User experiment , Process adaptation , process modeling , Process variants , Model maintainability
Journal title
Information Systems
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Information Systems
Record number
1230363
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