Ensuring Model Consistency in Declarative Process Discovery

Claudio Di Ciccio*, Fabrizio Maria Maggi, Marco Montali, Jan Mendling

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Declarative process models define the behaviour of business processes as a set of constraints. Declarative process discovery aims at inferring such constraints from event logs. Existing discovery techniques verify the satisfaction of candidate constraints over the log, but completely neglect their interactions. As a result, the inferred constraints can be mutually contradicting and their interplay may lead to an inconsistent process model that does not accept any trace. In such a case, the output turns out to be unusable for enactment, simulation or verification purposes. In addition, the discovered model contains, in general, redundancies that are due to complex interactions of several constraints and that cannot be solved using existing pruning approaches. We address these problems by proposing a technique that automatically resolves conflicts within the discovered models and is more powerful than existing pruning techniques to eliminate redundancies. First, we formally define the problems of constraint redundancy and conflict resolution. Thereafter, we introduce techniques based on the notion of an automata-product monoid that guarantee the consistency of the discovered models and, at the same time, keep the most interesting constraints in the pruned set. We evaluate the devised techniques on real-world benchmarks.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationBusiness Process Management - 13th International Conference, BPM 2015, Innsbruck, Austria, August 31 - September 3, 2015, Proceedings
EditorsHamid Reza Motahari-Nezhad, Jan Recker, Matthias Weidlich
PublisherSpringer
Pages144-159
Number of pages16
Volume9253
ISBN (Print)978-3-319-23062-7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2015

Publication series

NameLecture Notes in Computer Science
PublisherSpringer

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