Abstract
In the main, the attention of workflow researchers and workflow developers has focussed on the process perspective, i.e., control-flow. As a result, issues associated with the resource perspective, i.e., the people and machines actually doing the work, have been largely neglected. Although the process perspective is of most significance, appropriate consideration of the resource perspective is essential for successful implementation of workflow technology. Previous work has identified recurring, generic constructs in the control-flow and data perspectives, and presented them in the form of control-flow and data patterns. The next logical step is to describe workflow resource patterns that capture the various ways in which resources are represented and utilised in workflows. These patterns include a number of distinct groupings such as push patterns (“the system pushes work to a worker”) and pull patterns (“the worker pulls work from the system”) to describe the many ways in which work can be distributed. By delineating these patterns in a form that is independent of specific workflow technologies and modelling languages, we are able to provide a comprehensive treatment of the resource perspective and we subsequently use these patterns as the basis for a detailed comparison of a number of commercially available workflow management systems.
This work was partially supported by the Dutch research school BETA as part of the PATINT program and the Australian Research Council under the Discovery Grant Expressiveness Comparison and Interchange Facilitation between Business Process Execution Languages.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
van der Aalst, W.M.P.: Don’t go with the flow: Web services composition standards exposed. IEEE Intelligent Systems 18(1), 72–76 (2003)
van der Aalst, W.M.P., ter Hofstede, A.H.M., Kiepuszewski, B., Barros, A.P.: Workflow Patterns. Distributed and Parallel Databases 14(1), 5–51 (2003)
van der Aalst, W.M.P., Kumar, A.: Team-Enabled Workflow Management Systems. Data and Knowledge Engineering 38(3), 335–363 (2001)
van der Aalst, W.M.P., Kumar, A., Verbeek, H.M.W.: Organizational Modeling in UML and XML in the context of Workflow Systems. In: Haddad, H., Papadopoulos, G. (eds.) Proceedings of the 18th Annual ACM Symposium on Applied Computing (SAC 2003), pp. 603–608. ACM Press, New York (2003)
Bussler, C., Jablonski, S.: Policy Resolution for Workflow Management Systems. In: Proceedings of the 28th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, p. 831. IEEE Computer Society, Los Alamitos (1995)
Curbera, F., Goland, Y., Klein, J., Leymann, F., Roller, D., Thatte, S., Weerawarana, S.: Business Process Execution Language for Web Services, Version 1.0. Standards proposal by BEA Systems, International Business Machines Corporation, and Microsoft Corporation (2002)
Ferraiolo, D.F., Sandhu, R., Gavrila, S., Kuhn, D.R., Chandramouli, R.: Proposed NIST Standard for Role-Based Access Control. ACM Transactions on Information and System Security 4(3), 224–274 (2001)
Kumar, A., van der Aalst, W.M.P., Verbeek, H.M.W.: Dynamic Work Distribution in Workflow Management Systems: How to Balance Quality and Performance?. Journal of Management Information Systems 18(3), 157–193 (2002)
zur Muehlen, M.: Workflow-based Process Controlling: Foundation, Design and Application of workflow-driven Process Information Systems. Logos, Berlin (2004)
Rosemann, M., zur Muehlen, M.: Evaluation of Workflow Management Systems - a Meta Model Approach. Australian Journal of Information Systems 6(1), 103–116 (1998)
Russell, N., ter Hofstede, A.H.M., Edmond, D., van der Aalst, W.M.P.: Workflow Data Patterns. QUT Technical report, FIT-TR-2004-01, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane (2004), http://www.citi.qut.edu.au/about/research_pubs/technical.jsp
Russell, N., ter Hofstede, A.H.M., Edmond, D., van der Aalst, W.M.P.: Workflow Resource Patterns. BETA Working Paper Series, WP 127, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven (2004), http://fp.tm.tue.nl/beta/
WFMC. Workflow Management Coalition Workflow Standard: Workflow Process Definition Interface – XML Process Definition Language (XPDL) (WFMC-TC-1025). Technical report, Workflow Management Coalition, Lighthouse Point, Florida, USA (2002), http://www.wfmc.org/standards/docs.htm
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Russell, N., van der Aalst, W.M.P., ter Hofstede, A.H.M., Edmond, D. (2005). Workflow Resource Patterns: Identification, Representation and Tool Support. In: Pastor, O., Falcão e Cunha, J. (eds) Advanced Information Systems Engineering. CAiSE 2005. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3520. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11431855_16
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/11431855_16
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-26095-0
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-32127-9
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)