A Taxonomy of Adaptive Workflow Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

A Taxonomy of Adaptive Workflow Management

Description:

A Taxonomy of Adaptive Workflow Management Yanbo Han Amit Sheth Christoph Bussler AR&T The Boeing Company Seattle, WA LSDIS Lab University of Georgia – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:96
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: Zon98
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: A Taxonomy of Adaptive Workflow Management


1
A Taxonomy of Adaptive Workflow Management
  • Yanbo Han
  • Amit Sheth

Christoph Bussler
ART The Boeing Company Seattle, WA
LSDIS Lab University of Georgia Athens,
GA http//lsdis.cs.uga.edu
2
Example 1 Changes in Business Rules
New rule says any trip costing 3000 must be
approved by financial controller
Migrating Workflows Cichocki Rusinkiewicz,
NATO ASI, Istanbul, August 1997
3
Example 2a
  • In a hospital, inpatient treatment of a patient
    may follow one of many possible work procedure.
    Standard plan expands constantly in response to
    medical advancements, changes of insurance and
    hospital policies, discovery of new diseases, or
    new treatment methods, drugs, devices, etc.

4
Example 2b
  • If initial exam identifies needs for additional
    procedure in the blood test, the task/subprocess
    component is obtained from the repository and
    added to the subprocess

standard test
get blood
write report
special test
This example is from Han et al.
5
Example 3
  • Allocating new patient service request (or case)
    to a pool of nurses where number of nurses may
    change (change of shift-- fewer nurses in night
    shift, vacation/sickness-- fewer nurses than
    yesterday, etc)

Option 1 Assign new case to smallest
worklist. Option 2 Maintain a common case queue,
assign when nurse is available.
o o o
6
Example 4
  • In a telephone service order provisioning
    environment, there are five LFACS systems. We
    know that a particular type of task is to be
    processed by a LFACS system, but the specific
    LFACS system can be determined only at run-time
    based on the telephone number in a service
    provisioning request.

7
Example 5
  • A physician orders laboratory tests for a
    patient, but cannot wait for the results in case
    of an emergency. Thus, he/she may start a
    treatment process to treat the emergent case. As
    soon as the test results arrive, they should
    trigger an action to let the physician know they
    are available. Note that nobody knows exactly
    when the results will arrive. After receiving
    the results, the physician may need to modify
    his/her plan.

8
Evolution of WFMS
  • Changing Environment
  • Business activities and environments, as well as
    may engineering branches in general, are highly
    dynamic and subject to constant evolution.
  • Technical Advances
  • Technical advances often lead to systems
    reconfiguration, due to, for example, replacement
    and updating of software components, addition of
    new components, and changes in component
    interfaces.

9
Ad-hoc Derivation
  • Dynamic refinement
  • unavailability of a complete spec
  • User involvement
  • users decision-making needs to be considered
  • Unpredictable events
  • external stimuli, intervention of users, timeout
  • Erroneous situations
  • system failure, erroneous operations

10
Classification of workflow adaptation
Adaptation of WF system to a changing business
context (e.g., policy change)
Domain
  • Process
  • Schema
  • Task

Model evolution ad-hoc changes to model instances
  • Resource adjustment
  • Components interface
  • Human resources
  • Data-related adaptation
  • Resource
  • Software component
  • Organization model
  • Data Model

Infrastructure
System re-configuration
11
Mechanisms for Adaptive WF 1 of 2
  • Meta-model Approach
  • use meta-model to determine the structure and
    types of constituent components define a set of
    primitives to change model or model instance
  • Open-point approach
  • define special points in a workflow model, where
    adaptation can be made

12
Mechanisms for Adaptive WF 2 of 2
  • Synthesized approach
  • Flexible composition and dynamic hierarchy of
    workflow models
  • systematic management and dynamic binding of
    workflow resources
  • local decision making and user involvement
  • Exception handling and adaptive WFM
  • infrastructure support

13
METEORs ORBWork supports a variety of adaptation
See NATO ASI paper
14
Future emphasisCoordination and Collaboration
for Virtual Teams
Current Environment
Proposed Environment
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com