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These elements are used in event-driven process chain diagrams: Event Events are passive elements in event-driven process chains. They describe under what circumstances a function or a process works or which state a function or a process results in. Examples of events are "requirement captured", "material in stock", etc. In the EPC graph an ...
Event-driven process chains (EPC) and BPMN are two notations with similar expressivity when process modeling is concerned. [8] A BPMN model can be transformed into an EPC model. Conversely, an EPC model can be transformed into a BPMN model with only a slight loss of information. [9]
Example of a more complex EPC diagram (in German). An event-driven process chain (EPC) is a type of flow chart for business process modeling. EPC can be used to configure enterprise resource planning execution, and for business process improvement. It can be used to control an autonomous workflow instance in work sharing.
Each description view of the ARIS house is divided into three description levels: Concept. Structured representation of the business processes by means of description models that are understandable for the business side (depending on the view, e.g.: ERM, EPC, organization chart, function tree)
Event correlation; Event-driven architecture — (EDA) is a software architecture pattern promoting the production, detection, consumption of, and reaction to events. SEDA - Staged event-driven architecture decomposes complex, event-driven architectures into stages; Event Processing Technical Society — (EPTS) is an event processing community ...
Alex Rodriguez says that changes in Major League Baseball driven by the now widespread use of analytics are both “good and bad” for the game.
ARIS Express is a free-of-charge modeling tool for business process analysis and management. It supports different modeling notations such as BPMN 2, Event-driven Process Chains (EPC), Organizational charts, process landscapes, whiteboards, etc. ARIS Express was initially developed by IDS Scheer, which was bought by Software AG in December 2010.
Activity diagrams [1] are graphical representations of workflows of stepwise activities and actions [2] with support for choice, iteration, and concurrency. In the Unified Modeling Language, activity diagrams are intended to model both computational and organizational processes (i.e., workflows), as well as the data flows intersecting with the related activities.