Slides and Event Logs supporting the new book "Process Mining: Discovery, 
Conformance, and Enhancement of Business Processes"



http://www.processmining.org/book/



Process mining provides a new means to improve processes in a variety of 
application domains. Driven by the omnipresence of event data and the 
limitations of Business Process Management (BPM) and Business Intelligence (BI) 
approaches, a new discipline has emerged that builds on classical process 
model-driven approaches and data mining. During the last decade, breakthroughs 
have been realized that make it possible the automatically discover business 
processes from event data present in information systems ranging from ERP 
systems (e.g. SAP and Oracle) and E-business applications to hospital 
information systems and high-tech production systems. Process mining can also 
be used for conformance checking in the context of auditing, compliance, and 
governance. Moreover, by projecting event data onto discovered models, business 
processes can be improved in terms of costs, time, and quality.



The book "Process Mining: Discovery, Conformance, and Enhancement of Business 
Processes" (Springer, http://springer.com/978-3-642-19344-6, ISBN 
978-3-642-19344-6) by Wil van der Aalst is the first book on Process Mining. It 
collects the state-of-the-art results available in publications, software and 
best practices. To support the book a website 
http://www.processmining.org/book/ has been created containing slides, event 
logs, and models. The slides can be used for presentations, e.g., for 
university seminars to discuss the emerging topic of process mining and for 
training IT and business consultants to provide services based on process 
mining.  Many of the event logs mentioned in the book are available via 
http://www.processmining.org/book/. The open-source software ProM 
(http://www.promtools.org/prom6/) and other tools supporting the XES or MXML 
format can be used to discover process models from these example logs. Also 
models have been included to experiment with conformance checking (pinpoint 
discrepancies between event log and model) and other types of analysis.



For more information on process mining visit 
www.processmining.org<http://www.processmining.org>. For more information on 
the new process mining book see http://springer.com/978-3-642-19344-6. People 
of organizations that have the proper SpringerLink subscription can download 
the book from http://www.springerlink.com/content/978-3-642-19344-6.





----
[[ 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