loading
Papers Papers/2022 Papers Papers/2022

Research.Publish.Connect.

Paper

Paper Unlock

Authors: Josef Schiefer 1 and Carolyn McGregor 2

Affiliations: 1 IBM Watson Research Center, United States ; 2 Centre for Advanced Systems Engineering, University of Western Sydney, Australia

Keyword(s): Event Stream Processing, Event Correlation, Business Process Monitoring

Related Ontology Subjects/Areas/Topics: Coupling and Integrating Heterogeneous Data Sources ; Data Warehouses and OLAP ; Databases and Information Systems Integration ; Deductive, Active, Temporal and Real-Time Databases ; Enterprise Information Systems ; Enterprise Resource Planning ; Enterprise Software Technologies ; Simulation and Modeling ; Simulation Tools and Platforms ; Software Engineering

Abstract: With the increasing demand for real-time information on critical performance indicators of business processes, the capturing, transformation and correlation of real-world events with minimal latency are a prerequisite for improving the speed and effectiveness of an organization's business operations. Events often include key business information about their relationship to other events that can be utilized to collect relevant event data for the calculation of business performance indicators. In this paper we introduce an approach for correlating events of business processes that uses correlation sessions to represent correlation knowledge. Correlation sessions facilitate the processing of data across multiple events and thereby enable a calculating of business metrics in near real-time. The benefit over existing approaches is that it is tailored to instrument business processes and business applications that may operate in a heterogeneous software environment. We propose a Java-based , container-managed environment which provides a distributed, scalable, near-real time processing of events and which includes a correlation service that effectively manages correlation sessions. We also show a complete example that illustrates how correlation sessions can be utilized for computing the cycle time of business processes. (More)

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Sign In Guest: Register as new SciTePress user now for free.

Sign In SciTePress user: please login.

PDF ImageMy Papers

You are not signed in, therefore limits apply to your IP address 3.135.183.89

In the current month:
Recent papers: 100 available of 100 total
2+ years older papers: 200 available of 200 total

Paper citation in several formats:
Schiefer, J. and McGregor, C. (2004). CORRELATING EVENTS FOR MONITORING BUSINESS PROCESSES. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 1: ICEIS; ISBN 972-8865-00-7; ISSN 2184-4992, SciTePress, pages 320-327. DOI: 10.5220/0002618403200327

@conference{iceis04,
author={Josef Schiefer. and Carolyn McGregor.},
title={CORRELATING EVENTS FOR MONITORING BUSINESS PROCESSES},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 1: ICEIS},
year={2004},
pages={320-327},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0002618403200327},
isbn={972-8865-00-7},
issn={2184-4992},
}

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 1: ICEIS
TI - CORRELATING EVENTS FOR MONITORING BUSINESS PROCESSES
SN - 972-8865-00-7
IS - 2184-4992
AU - Schiefer, J.
AU - McGregor, C.
PY - 2004
SP - 320
EP - 327
DO - 10.5220/0002618403200327
PB - SciTePress