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II Workshop de Gestão de
Processos de Negócio
27 e 28 de Outubro | WebMedia 2008, Vila Velha-ES, Brasil
O aumento da competitividade e das
exigências impostas às empresas e organizações em geral leva estas a
adotar modelos organizacionais e processos de negócio cada vez mais
complexos e interligados. Para lidar com a complexidade destes
processos são utilizadas as técnicas de Gestão de Processos de Negócio.
Tais técnicas apóiam as atividades de captura, execução, controle,
análise e melhoria de processos de negócio, eventualmente com o suporte
provido por sistemas de informação orientados a processos.
O Workshop de Gestão de Processos de
Negócio (Workshop on Business Process Management) (WBPM 2008) é um
fórum dedicado à apresentação e discussão de técnicas, metodologias,
modelos e frameworks de Gestão de Processos de Negócio no cenário
atual, no qual processos de negócio cruzam as barreiras organizacionais
e possibilitam a integração de organizações, indivíduos, sistemas e
serviços.
Tópicos de Interesse
O comitê de programa convida a
submissão de trabalhos para apresentação no workshop abordando os
seguintes tópicos:
- Gestão de processos
inter-organizacionais;
- Contratos eletrônicos;
- Composição de serviços e processos;
- Metodologias de gestão de processos de negócio;
- Repositórios de processos de negócio e serviços;
- Arquiteturas orientadas a serviços e gestão de processos de negócio;
- Serviços web para gestão de processos de negócio;
- Ontologias para processos de negócio;
- Modelagem e semântica de processos de negócio;
- Execução de processos de negócio;
- Monitoramento de processos de negócio;
- Transações em processos de negócio;
- Aspectos de segurança em processos de negócio;
- Gestão de processos em grades computacionais;
- Sistemas de informação e processos de negócio;
- Descoberta de conhecimento em processos de negócio;
- Engenharia de requisitos e processos de negócio;
- Qualidade de serviço e processos de negócio.
Formato do Workshop
O WBPM terá duração de dois
dias e incluirá palestras e apresentações de artigos técnicos. A
palestra de abertura do WBPM será ministrada pelo palestrante
internacional Fabio
Casati, professor da Universidade de Trento, Itália.
Title:
Resource Lifecycle Management: BPM at work in the social web
Abstract:
The social web is (also) about a web of resources that are
collaboratively managed, often in a fairly unstructured fashion.
Examples are wikis or google docs. The same philosophy is spreading to
"business resources", such as project schedules and project
deliverables, often shared and edited collaboratively, though often
with a little more structure. In open source software development, in a
way a precursor to Web 2.0, the "software resources" are managed
similarly. Some aspects common to all these resources is that 1) they
go through some lifecycle (which may or may not be structured and
defined); 2) even when defined, the lifecycle varies frequently, and
this variation is not an "exception", is normal business life (just im
agine defining a strict lifecycle for your project deliverables
and sticking to it 100%....); 3) humans are in control: managing
resources is not about automating the execution of their
lifecycle. I certainly would not want a BPM to manage my activity
of writing a paper. However, it is about being able to initiate actions
when needed (submission for review, testing of software) and to monitor
the status and history of a possibly large set of resources that I am
managing (e.g., a set of deliverables for my project).
In this talk I will present a resource lifecycle management system that
can manage anything that can be referred to by a URI, that can be used
by any skilled web user even without programming skills. It's key
aspects are the simplicity of the model, the embracing of the inherent
"unstructuredness" of the life of (Web) resources, the ability to
monitor status and history of all managed resources, the ability to
make changes easily on the fly, and the balance between human and
automated control. In particular, in the RLM system, the "workflow
engine" are in fact the humans managing the resources, initiating
automated actions if and when needed. The approach is inspired in part
by BPM systems and in part by the philosophy of the Web.T
he RLM system will be hosted and available for use by anybody who
wants to model the lifecycle of any resource, to automate certain
(resource-specific) actions (e.g., submission for review), and to
observe the evolution of a set of resources of interest. The
applications are countless, but examples include project deliverables
(which typically vaguely follow a lifecycle based on a project quality
plan), collaborative editing on wikis, writing of code and
documentation, or composing, arranging, and recording a song.
Bio:
Fabio Casati is professor of computer science at the University of
Trento. He recently joined the University of Trento after 7 years in
Hewlett-Packard USA, where he was technical lead for the research
program on business process intelligence. Fabio has also contributed
(as architect and data modeller) to the development of several HP
commercial products and solutions in the area of web services and
business process management. He is co-author of a book on Web services,
member of the editorial board of ACM TWEB, and member of the steering
committee of the international conferences on Service-Oriented
Computing and Business Process Management.
Informações para os
Autores
A submissão de trabalhos será
exclusivamente eletrônica através do sistema JEMS/SBC (https://submissoes.sbc.org.br).
Os artigos podem ser escritos em português ou inglês, e submetidos
exclusivamente no
formato PDF. O texto deve conter no máximo 10 páginas, incluindo
figuras, diagramas, referências, anexos e resumo e seguir o estilo de
publicações da ACM (em http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html).
Artigos submetidos em
português devem incluir resumos in inglês e português.
Todos artigos
serão revisados pelo comitê de programa e artigos selecionados serão
apresentados durante o workshop e publicados em anais eletrônicos (CD).
Artigos submetidos devem ser originais e não devem ser submetidos
simultaneamente ou aceitos para publicação.
Estamos negociando para que
os melhores artigos do workshop sejam publicados em um special issue do International
Journal of Business Process Integration and Management (IJBPIM).
Datas Importantes
Submissão de artigos: 15 de
agosto de 2008 (prorrogado)
Notificação para autores: 9 de setembro de 2008 (adiado)
Versão final dos artigos: 15 de setembro de 2008
Coordenação Geral e Coordenação do Comitê de Programa
João Paulo Andrade Almeida
– UFES
Duncan Dubugras Alcoba Ruiz – PUCRS
Maria Beatriz Felgar de Toledo – IC/UNICAMP
Comitê de
Programa
Ana Karla Alves de
Medeiros – Eindhoven University of Technology
André C P L F de Carvalho – ICMC/USP
Edmundo Mauro Madeira – IC/UNICAMP
Ellen Francine Barbosa – ICMC/USP
Fábio Verdi – FEEC/UNICAMP
Fernanda Baião – UNIRIO
Flávia Santoro – UNIRIO
Giancarlo Guizzardi – UFES / LOA
Islene C Garcia –- IC/UNICAMP
Itana Gimenes – UEM
Jano Moreira de Souza – COPPE/UFRJ
Jó Ueyama – USP Leste
João Eduardo Ferreira – IME/USP
José Valdeni de Lima – UFRGS
Marcelo Fantinato – Motorola
Marta Mattoso – COPPE
Mirella M Moro – UFRGS
Miriam Capretz – University Western Ontario, Canada
Patrick Hung – University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT),
Canada
Paul Grace – Lancaster University, Inglaterra
Paulo Rupino Cunha – Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal
Renata Araújo – UNIRIO
Renata Silva Souza Guizzardi – UFES
Rodrigo Quites Reis – UFPA
Contato
Informações sobre o
workshop
devem ser enviadas para Maria Beatriz F. Toledo (beatriz@ic.unicamp.br)
e João Paulo A. Almeida (jpalmeida@ieee.org).
Programa
SEGUNDA-FEIRA -
27/10/2008 – Sala Estrela da Manhã
9:00-10:30
Palestra internacional: Resource Lifecycle Management: BPM at work in
the social web
Prof. Fabio Casati
(Univ. Trento, Itália)
Abstract:
The social web is (also) about a web of resources that are
collaboratively managed, often in a fairly unstructured fashion.
Examples are wikis or google docs. The same philosophy is spreading to
"business resources", such as project schedules and project
deliverables, often shared and edited collaboratively, though often
with a little more structure. In open source software development, in a
way a precursor to Web 2.0, the "software resources" are managed
similarly. Some aspects common to all these resources is that 1) they
go through some lifecycle (which may or may not be structured and
defined); 2) even when defined, the lifecycle varies frequently, and
this variation is not an "exception", is normal business life (just im
agine defining a strict lifecycle for your project deliverables
and sticking to it 100%....); 3) humans are in control: managing
resources is not about automating the execution of their
lifecycle. I certainly would not want a BPM to manage my activity
of writing a paper. However, it is about being able to initiate actions
when needed (submission for review, testing of software) and to monitor
the status and history of a possibly large set of resources that I am
managing (e.g., a set of deliverables for my project).
In this talk I will present a resource lifecycle management system that
can manage anything that can be referred to by a URI, that can be used
by any skilled web user even without programming skills. It's key
aspects are the simplicity of the model, the embracing of the inherent
"unstructuredness" of the life of (Web) resources, the ability to
monitor status and history of all managed resources, the ability to
make changes easily on the fly, and the balance between human and
automated control. In particular, in the RLM system, the "workflow
engine" are in fact the humans managing the resources, initiating
automated actions if and when needed. The approach is inspired in part
by BPM systems and in part by the philosophy of the Web. The RLM system
will be hosted and available for use by anybody who wants to model the
lifecycle of any resource, to automate certain (resource-specific)
actions (e.g., submission for review), and to observe the evolution of
a set of resources of interest. The applications are countless, but
examples include project deliverables (which typically vaguely follow a
lifecycle based on a project quality plan), collaborative editing on
wikis, writing of code and documentation, or composing, arranging, and
recording a song.
Bio:
Fabio Casati is professor of computer science at the University of
Trento. He recently joined the University of Trento after 7 years in
Hewlett-Packard USA, where he was technical lead for the research
program on business process intelligence. Fabio has also contributed
(as architect and data modeller) to the development of several HP
commercial products and solutions in the area of web services and
business process management. He is co-author of a book on Web services,
member of the editorial board of ACM TWEB, and member of the steering
committee of the international conferences on Service-Oriented
Computing and Business Process Management.
10:30-11:00 Coffee-Break
11:00-12:30
WBPM Sessão Técnica #1: Modelagem de Processos de Negócio e
Engenharia de Requisitos
Identificando
expectativas de qualidade de SIs com o apoio de Modelos de Negócio
Rosaria Bittencourt (UNIRIO), Renata Araujo (UNIRIO)
Alinhando
Análise de Objetivos e Modelagem de Processos: uma Experiência em
Ambiente de Saúde
Evellin Cristine Souza Cardoso (UFES), Renata S.S. Guizzardi (UFES)
Dos
processos de colaboração para as ferramentas: a abordagem de
desenvolvimento do projeto CommunicaTEC
Wallace Ugulino (UNIRIO), Ricardo Rodrigues Nunes (UNIRIO), Claudio
Libanio Oliveira (UNIRIO), Mariano Pimentel (UNIRIO), Flavia Santoro
(UNIRIO)
12:30-14:00 Almoço
14:00-16:00 WBPM
Sessão Técnica #2: Descoberta de Conhecimento e Mineração de Processos
de Negócio
Uma
experiência em mineração de processos de manutenção de software
John Cruz (PUCRS), Duncan Ruiz (PUCRS)
Identificação
de Regras de Negócio utilizando Mineração de Processos
Raphael Crerie (UNIRIO), Fernanda Baião (UNIRIO), Flávia Santoro
(UNIRIO)
Fraud
Detection in Process Aware Systems
Fábio Bezerra (UNICAMP), Jacques Wainer (UNICAMP)
Escavando
as Linguagens de Modelagem Organizacional e Modelagem de Processos de
Negócio do ARIS Method
Paulo Sérgio Santos Júnior (UFES), João Paulo A. Almeida (UFES)
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-18:00 Palestra
Internacional WebMedia – Prof. Simon Harper (University of Manchester,
Reino Unido) – NeoVictorian Computing, with a Twist (Sala
Madrigal)
18:30-19:00 Abertura
Oficial do WebMedia e SBSC 2008 (Sala Madrigal)
19:30 Coquetel de
Abertura (Cobertura do Hotel Pasárgada)
TERÇA-FEIRA
- 28/10/2008 – Sala Estrela da Manhã
8:20-9:20 Palestra
Nacional: Derivação de Requisitos de Sistemas de Informação a Partir de
Modelos de Processos de Negócio: Teoria e Prática
Profa. Flávia
Santoro (NP2Tec, UNIRIO)
9:20-10:30 Painel
Internacional: Challenges in BPM
Painelistas:
Fabio Casati (U.
Trento - Italy)
Clarence Ellis (U.
Colorado at Boulder)
Marcos Borges (UFRJ)
Marta Rettelbusch De
Bastos (CPQd)
Vinicius Amaral
(iProcess)
11:00 – 12:30 Sessão
Técnica #3: Metodologias e Modelagem de Processos de Negócio
Peculiaridades
da Construção de Métricas de Complexidade para Processos de Negócio
Modelados por EPCs
Suzana Mesquita de Borba Maranhão (PUC-Rio)
Uma
Modelagem para o Processo de Negócio: Processo de Desenvolvimento de
Produto
Maria T. T. Andrade (CEFET-BA), Cristiano Vasconcelos Ferreira (SENAI
CIMATEC), Karina B. Villela (UNIFACS)
Um
Método de Validação da Conformidade entre Processos e Regras de Negócio
através da Animação
Denis Silveira (IBMEC-RJ/COPPE-UFRJ), Paulo Boaventura Netto (UFRJ),
Eber Schmitz (UFRJ)
Patrocínio
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