BPM 2013 - BPM 2013 : 11th International Conference on Business Process Management
Topics/Call fo Papers
BPM 2013 is the eleventh edition of the reference conference for researchers and practitioners in the field of Business Process Management (BPM). The conference covers all aspects of BPM, including theory, models, techniques, architectures, systems, and empirical studies, and engages the most renowned representatives of the BPM community worldwide in talks, tutorials, and scientific discussions.
This year’s edition of the conference seeks contributions in all the traditional areas of BPM and, at the same time, reaches out to emerging fields of research, industrial practice, and applications. Recognizing the interdisciplinary nature of BPM, the conference also encourages submissions that embrace other disciplines such as Information Systems and IT Management, Data and Knowledge Management, Web/Software Engineering, Service-Oriented Computing, Social Computing, Cloud Computing, and many more. The key criteria for acceptance are excellence and answering challenges specific to the field of BPM.
As in previous editions, BPM 2013 will host a dedicated industrial track ? next to its research track ? and feature a varied set of BPM-related workshops and co-located events. Industrial track submissions should report on innovative industrial implementations and applications and highlight their impact on business practice.
BPM 2013 will take place in Beijing, the capital of China, and it will be the first edition of the BPM conference series in Asia. Next to the world-famous sites of the Great Wall, the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, and Tiantan ? four world cultural heritage sites recognized by UNESCO ? Beijing hosts a constantly growing concentration of cutting-edge, industrial research labs and academic institutions from all over the world, making it a melting pot of creativity and innovation.
Conference topics
The topics for both research and industry papers include, but are not limited to:
Process modeling and theory
Foundations of business process models
Process modeling languages, notations and methods
Reference process models
Process patterns and standards
Artifact-centric business processes
Loosely structured business processes
Automated process composition and synthesis
Process metadata and semantic reasoning
Variability and configuration of process models
Process simulation and static analysis
Process model management
Process model storage
Process model repositories
Process model indexing
Process model retrieval
Process model similarity
Process model transformations
Process architectures and platforms
Process-oriented software architectures
Service-oriented architectures for BPM
Workflow management systems
Security aspects of business process execution
Automated planning for business process execution
Resource management in business process execution
Process componentization and component repositories
Management of process execution data
Process tracing and monitoring
Process performance measurement
Process mining
Process data warehousing
Data streaming in business processes
Process flexibility and evolution
Process exception handling
Adaptive and context-aware processes
Case handling
Process-enhanced groupware
Process change management
Monitoring and provenance across change
Human-centric BPM
People-intensive processes
Crowdsourcing processes
Social business processes
User-centric aspects of process management and use
Integrating strategy, processes, people and IT
Globally distributed process management
Non-traditional BPM scenarios
Knowledge-intensive processes
Data-driven processes
Distributed and mobile processes
Inter-process planning and coordination
Grid and scientific workflows
Management issues and empirical studies
Business process lifecycle management
Relationship between business strategy and business process
Success factors and measures in BPM
BPM governance and compliance management
BPM maturity
Adoption and Practice of BPM
Case Studies and Experience Reports
Submission Instructions
Papers should be formatted according to Springer’s LNCS formatting guidelines (for instructions and style sheets see http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). Submissions must be in English and not exceed 16 pages of length. The title page must contain a short abstract clarifying the relation of the paper with the topics above. The paper must clearly state the problem being addressed, the goal of the work, the results achieved, and the relation to other work.
Industry papers must be clearly marked as such, so that they can be appropriately reviewed by the program committee. Concerning length and formatting, industry papers must follow the same rules and guidelines as research papers.
Papers should be submitted electronically in PDF format via the BPM 2013 EasyChair submission site: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bpm201...
Submissions must be original contributions that have not been published previously, nor already submitted to other conferences or journals in parallel with this conference.
Publication
All accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. For each accepted paper, at least one author must register for the conference and present the paper. Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit a paper for a special issue of Information Systems (Elsevier).
Key Dates (time zone to be fixed)
Abstracts due: March 13, 2013
Full papers due: March 20, 2013
Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2013
Camera-ready papers deadline: June 15, 2013
Conference: August 26-30, 2013
Program Chairs
Florian Daniel, University of Trento, Italy
Jianmin Wang, Tsinghua University, P.R. China
Barbara Weber, University of Innsbruck, Austria
This year’s edition of the conference seeks contributions in all the traditional areas of BPM and, at the same time, reaches out to emerging fields of research, industrial practice, and applications. Recognizing the interdisciplinary nature of BPM, the conference also encourages submissions that embrace other disciplines such as Information Systems and IT Management, Data and Knowledge Management, Web/Software Engineering, Service-Oriented Computing, Social Computing, Cloud Computing, and many more. The key criteria for acceptance are excellence and answering challenges specific to the field of BPM.
As in previous editions, BPM 2013 will host a dedicated industrial track ? next to its research track ? and feature a varied set of BPM-related workshops and co-located events. Industrial track submissions should report on innovative industrial implementations and applications and highlight their impact on business practice.
BPM 2013 will take place in Beijing, the capital of China, and it will be the first edition of the BPM conference series in Asia. Next to the world-famous sites of the Great Wall, the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, and Tiantan ? four world cultural heritage sites recognized by UNESCO ? Beijing hosts a constantly growing concentration of cutting-edge, industrial research labs and academic institutions from all over the world, making it a melting pot of creativity and innovation.
Conference topics
The topics for both research and industry papers include, but are not limited to:
Process modeling and theory
Foundations of business process models
Process modeling languages, notations and methods
Reference process models
Process patterns and standards
Artifact-centric business processes
Loosely structured business processes
Automated process composition and synthesis
Process metadata and semantic reasoning
Variability and configuration of process models
Process simulation and static analysis
Process model management
Process model storage
Process model repositories
Process model indexing
Process model retrieval
Process model similarity
Process model transformations
Process architectures and platforms
Process-oriented software architectures
Service-oriented architectures for BPM
Workflow management systems
Security aspects of business process execution
Automated planning for business process execution
Resource management in business process execution
Process componentization and component repositories
Management of process execution data
Process tracing and monitoring
Process performance measurement
Process mining
Process data warehousing
Data streaming in business processes
Process flexibility and evolution
Process exception handling
Adaptive and context-aware processes
Case handling
Process-enhanced groupware
Process change management
Monitoring and provenance across change
Human-centric BPM
People-intensive processes
Crowdsourcing processes
Social business processes
User-centric aspects of process management and use
Integrating strategy, processes, people and IT
Globally distributed process management
Non-traditional BPM scenarios
Knowledge-intensive processes
Data-driven processes
Distributed and mobile processes
Inter-process planning and coordination
Grid and scientific workflows
Management issues and empirical studies
Business process lifecycle management
Relationship between business strategy and business process
Success factors and measures in BPM
BPM governance and compliance management
BPM maturity
Adoption and Practice of BPM
Case Studies and Experience Reports
Submission Instructions
Papers should be formatted according to Springer’s LNCS formatting guidelines (for instructions and style sheets see http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). Submissions must be in English and not exceed 16 pages of length. The title page must contain a short abstract clarifying the relation of the paper with the topics above. The paper must clearly state the problem being addressed, the goal of the work, the results achieved, and the relation to other work.
Industry papers must be clearly marked as such, so that they can be appropriately reviewed by the program committee. Concerning length and formatting, industry papers must follow the same rules and guidelines as research papers.
Papers should be submitted electronically in PDF format via the BPM 2013 EasyChair submission site: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bpm201...
Submissions must be original contributions that have not been published previously, nor already submitted to other conferences or journals in parallel with this conference.
Publication
All accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. For each accepted paper, at least one author must register for the conference and present the paper. Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit a paper for a special issue of Information Systems (Elsevier).
Key Dates (time zone to be fixed)
Abstracts due: March 13, 2013
Full papers due: March 20, 2013
Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2013
Camera-ready papers deadline: June 15, 2013
Conference: August 26-30, 2013
Program Chairs
Florian Daniel, University of Trento, Italy
Jianmin Wang, Tsinghua University, P.R. China
Barbara Weber, University of Innsbruck, Austria
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- Third International Workshop on Advances in High-Performance Computational Earth Sciences: Applications and Frameworks
- International Workshop on Knowledge representation and applied models and metadata in computational science (KREAM)
- International Workshop on computational finance
- 10th International Workshop on Simulation of Multiphysics Multiscale Systems
Last modified: 2012-09-26 22:59:06