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Auteurs principaux: Fahland, Dirk, Montali, Marco, Lebherz, Julian, van der Aalst, Wil M. P., van Asseldonk, Maarten, Blank, Peter, Bosmans, Lien, Brenscheidt, Marcus, di Ciccio, Claudio, Delgado, Andrea, Calegari, Daniel, Peeperkorn, Jari, Verbeek, Eric, Vugs, Lotte, Wynn, Moe Thandar
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.14495
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author Fahland, Dirk
Montali, Marco
Lebherz, Julian
van der Aalst, Wil M. P.
van Asseldonk, Maarten
Blank, Peter
Bosmans, Lien
Brenscheidt, Marcus
di Ciccio, Claudio
Delgado, Andrea
Calegari, Daniel
Peeperkorn, Jari
Verbeek, Eric
Vugs, Lotte
Wynn, Moe Thandar
author_facet Fahland, Dirk
Montali, Marco
Lebherz, Julian
van der Aalst, Wil M. P.
van Asseldonk, Maarten
Blank, Peter
Bosmans, Lien
Brenscheidt, Marcus
di Ciccio, Claudio
Delgado, Andrea
Calegari, Daniel
Peeperkorn, Jari
Verbeek, Eric
Vugs, Lotte
Wynn, Moe Thandar
contents Process mining is shifting towards use cases that explicitly leverage the relations between data objects and events under the term of object-centric process mining. Realizing this shift and generally simplifying the exchange and transformation of data between source systems and process mining solutions requires a standardized data format for such object-centric event data (OCED). This report summarizes the activities and results for identifying requirements and challenges for a community-supported standard for OCED. (1) We present a proposal for a core model for object-centric event data that underlies all known use cases. (2) We detail the limitations of the core model wrt. a broad range of use cases and discuss how to overcome them through conventions, usage patterns, and extensions of OCED, exhausting the design-space for an OCED data model and the inherent trade-offs in representing object-centric event data. (3) These insights are backed by five independent OCED implementations which are presented alongside a series of lessons learned in academic and industrial case studies. The results of this report provide guidance to the community to start adopting and building new process mining use cases and solutions around the reliable concepts for object-centric event data, and to engage in a structured process for standardizing OCED based on the known OCED design space.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_14495
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Towards a Simple and Extensible Standard for Object-Centric Event Data (OCED) -- Core Model, Design Space, and Lessons Learned
Fahland, Dirk
Montali, Marco
Lebherz, Julian
van der Aalst, Wil M. P.
van Asseldonk, Maarten
Blank, Peter
Bosmans, Lien
Brenscheidt, Marcus
di Ciccio, Claudio
Delgado, Andrea
Calegari, Daniel
Peeperkorn, Jari
Verbeek, Eric
Vugs, Lotte
Wynn, Moe Thandar
Databases
Process mining is shifting towards use cases that explicitly leverage the relations between data objects and events under the term of object-centric process mining. Realizing this shift and generally simplifying the exchange and transformation of data between source systems and process mining solutions requires a standardized data format for such object-centric event data (OCED). This report summarizes the activities and results for identifying requirements and challenges for a community-supported standard for OCED. (1) We present a proposal for a core model for object-centric event data that underlies all known use cases. (2) We detail the limitations of the core model wrt. a broad range of use cases and discuss how to overcome them through conventions, usage patterns, and extensions of OCED, exhausting the design-space for an OCED data model and the inherent trade-offs in representing object-centric event data. (3) These insights are backed by five independent OCED implementations which are presented alongside a series of lessons learned in academic and industrial case studies. The results of this report provide guidance to the community to start adopting and building new process mining use cases and solutions around the reliable concepts for object-centric event data, and to engage in a structured process for standardizing OCED based on the known OCED design space.
title Towards a Simple and Extensible Standard for Object-Centric Event Data (OCED) -- Core Model, Design Space, and Lessons Learned
topic Databases
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.14495