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Eugene Odum, writing in 1953, considered that synecology should be divided into population ecology, community ecology and ecosystem ecology, renaming autecology as 'species ecology' (Odum regarded "autecology" as an archaic term), thus that there were four subdivisions of ecology. [2]
Autecology was pioneered by German field botanists in the late 19th century. [4] During the 20th century, autecology continued to exist mainly as a descriptive science rather than one with supporting theory and the most notable proponents of an autecological approach, Herbert Andrewartha and Charles Birch, avoided the term autecology when referring to species-focused ecological investigation ...
The Workflow Management Coalition, [6] BPM.com [7] and several other sources [8] use the following definition: Business process management (BPM) is a discipline involving any combination of modeling, automation, execution, control, measurement and optimization of business activity flows, in support of enterprise goals, spanning systems, employees, customers and partners within and beyond the ...
A business process modeling of a process with a normal flow with the Business Process Model and Notation. Business process modeling (BPM) is the action of capturing and representing processes of an enterprise (i.e. modeling them), so that the current business processes may be analyzed, applied securely and consistently, improved, and automated.
Why is that? The terms are synonymous sekte. I think that comm. ecol has wider usage than synecology (albeit, in part it's a US-Europe difference). Guettarda 19:28, 18 Mar 2005 (UTC) What makes you say the ecology versions have widespread usage. Synecology/Autecology seem to me more official terminology.
The term process management usually refers to the management of engineering processes and project management processes where a process is a collection of related, structured tasks that produce a specific service or product to address a certain goal for a particular organization, actor or set of actors.
Subject-oriented business process management (S-BPM) is a communication based view on actors (the subjects), which compose a business process orchestration or choreography. [1] The modeling paradigm uses five symbols to model any process and allows direct transformation into executable form.
A natural fit for CEP has been with business process management (BPM). [11] BPM focuses on end-to-end business processes, in order to continuously optimize and align for its operational environment. However, the optimization of a business does not rely solely upon its individual, end-to-end processes.