We received several requests for a deadline extension of the ATAED'2015
workshop in Brussels.

The new deadline for full papers (up to 15 pages) and for short papers (up
to 5 pages) is May 17, 2015. 

 

=====================================================================

 

Algorithms & Theories for the Analysis of Event Data (ATAED'2015)

Brussels, Belgium, June 22–23, 2015

 

Deadline for papers: May 17, 2015

 

The workshop Algorithms & Theories for the Analysis of Event Data
(ATAED'2015) is a satellite event of both the 36th International Conference
on Application and Theory of Petri Nets and Concurrency (Petri nets 2015)
and the 14th International Conference on Application of Concurrency to
System Design (ACSD 2015). The workshop aims to attract papers related to
Process Mining, Region Theory and other synthesis techniques. These
techniques have in common that "lower level" behavioral descriptions (event
logs, partial orders, transition systems, etc.) are used to create "higher
level" process models (e.g., various classes of Petri nets, BPMN, or UML
activity diagrams). 

 

Recent developments in process mining make it possible to analyze event
data, thereby focusing on behavior rather than correlations and simplistic
performance indicators. For example, event logs can be used to automatically
learn end-to-end process models based on historic event data. Next to the
automated discovery of the real underlying process, there are process mining
techniques to analyze bottlenecks, to uncover hidden inefficiencies, to
check compliance, to explain deviations, to predict performance, and to
guide users towards "better" processes. ATAED'2015 solicits papers related
to process mining algorithms and theories. However, the scope is not limited
to this. On the one hand, other types of "lower level" behavioral
descriptions may be used (next to event logs), e.g., transition systems,
partially ordered runs, sequence charts, and Markov chains. On the other
hand, also related problems (next to process mining) may be addressed, e.g.,
hardware synthesis, visualization of concurrent system behavior, synthesis
of controllers, analysis of biological (membrane) systems, etc. These are
all within the scope. The idea is always the same: Going from "lower level"
behavioral descriptions to "higher level" process models.

 

The program committee invites submission of full papers (up to 15 pages) and
of short papers (up to 5 pages). Papers should be submitted as pdf-files
using the Springer LNCS-format (
<http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html>
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). Papers need to be submitted
via Easychair:  <https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ataed2015>
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ataed2015. 

 

Topics:

·         Possible topics of the solicited papers are:

·         theory and applications of process mining

·         automated business process model discovery

·         conformance checking, alignments, and replay algorithms

·         extensions and applications of region theory in different fields

·         business process intelligence and other data-driven process
oriented approaches 

·         techniques combining formal methods with data science approaches

·         algorithms, theories, and tools for region theory and other forms
of synthesis

·         case studies and empirical investigations using event data

 

Important Dates:

·         Deadline for papers: May 10th, 2015
May 17, 2015

·         Notification of paper acceptance: June 1st, 2015          June 4,
2015                 

·         Deadline for final contributions: June 10, 2015
June 14, 2015

·         Workshop: June 22-23, 2015

 

Program Committee:

·         Wil van der Aalst,TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands (co-chair)

·         Rafael Accorsi, Universitaet Freiburg, Germany

·         Eric Badouel, INRIA Rennes, France

·         Robin Bergenthum, FernUni Hagen, Germany (co-chair)

·         Luca Bernardinello, Università degli studi di Milano-Bicocca,
Italy

·         Seppe vanden Broucke, KU Leuven, Belgium

·         Benoît Caillaud, INRIA Rennes, France

·         Toon Calders, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium

·         Josep Carmona, UPC Barcelona, Spain (co-chair)

·         Paolo     Ceravolo, University of Milan, Italy

·         Benoît Depaire, Hasselt University, Belgium

·         Jörg Desel, FernUni Hagen, Germany

·         Boudewijn van Dongen, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands

·         Luciano García-Bañuelos, University of Tartu, Estonia

·         Luís Gomes, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal

·         Gabriel Juhás, Slovak University of Technology, Slovak Republic

·         Anna Kalenkova, Higher School of Economics NRU, Russia

·         Jetty Kleijn, Leiden University, The Netherlands

·         Robert Lorenz, Uni Augsburg, Germany

·         Zbigniew Paszkiewicz, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Belgium

·         Marta Pietkiewicz-Koutny, Newcastle University, GB

·         Grzegorz Rozenberg, Leiden University, The Netherlands

·         Marcos Sepúlveda, Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile

·         Jianmin Wang, Tsinghua University, China

·         Jochen De Weerdt, KU Leuven, Belgium

·         Alex Yakovlev, Newcastle University, GB

 

History of the workshop:

The workshop can be viewed as a succession of the Applications of Region
Theory (ART) workshop series:

* Applications of Region Theory (ART) 2013, Barcelona, Spain

* Applications of Region Theory (ART) 2011, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

* Applications of Region Theory (ART) 2010, Braga, Portugal 

Regions have been defined about 20 years ago by Ehrenfeucht and Rozenberg as
sets of nodes of a finite transition system that correspond to potential
conditions that enable or disable transition occurrences in a corresponding
elementary net system. Initially, region theory focused on synthesis
approaches where the transition system and resulting Petri net are
equivalent (e.g., bisimilar). In recent years, various forms of region-based
ideas (language-based and state-based variants) have been applied in the
context of process mining. Here, there is only example behavior and, as a
result, classical techniques fail to work. One needs to deal with new
problems such as noise and incompleteness. Hence, there are many theoretical
challenges with a high practical relevance. This workshop is not limited to
region-based approaches. In fact all techniques that aim at learning or
checking concurrent behavior from transition systems, runs, or event logs
are welcome. The workshop is supported by the IEEE Task Force on Process
Mining.

 

For more information, visit: 

·          <https://wiki.fernuni-hagen.de/art/index.php/ATAED2015>
https://wiki.fernuni-hagen.de/art/index.php/ATAED2015 [ATAED Workshop page],

·          <https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ataed2015>
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ataed2015 [Submission of ATAED
papers], 

·          <http://www.ulb.ac.be/di/verif/pn2015acsd2015/satellite.html>
http://www.ulb.ac.be/di/verif/pn2015acsd2015/satellite.html [Petri nets/ACSD
workshops], and

·         http://www.ulb.ac.be/di/verif/pn2015acsd2015/index.html [Petri
nets/ACSD general information].

 

 

 

----
[[ Petri Nets World:                                                ]]
[[              http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TGI/PetriNets/ ]]
[[ Mailing list FAQ:                                                ]]
[[ http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/TGI/PetriNets/pnml/faq.html ]]
[[ Post messages/summary of replies:                                ]]
[[                               [email protected] ]]

Reply via email to