Business processes are an essential part of each organization since they represent a template describing how organizational activities (and other assets) are interrelated in order to produce an outcome (i.e. products or services). Thus, processes are important organizational assets, however in contrast to materials, tools or infrastructure, they are intangible, representing an abstraction of instances …
Review of our research in 2017
In 2016 the focus of our work was on research activities and they yield results in 2017. Several articles were published (with coauthors), where I will highlight some of the best ones. At this point I also want to express my gratefulness to all the coauthors for great work and excellent collaboration. Complexity metrics for …
BPMDS’18 working conference
Very honored to become a member of the program committee of the 19th working conference on Business Process Modeling, Development, and Support (BPMDS2018), which will take place on 11-12 June in Tallinn, Estonia.
BMSD 2018
Very honored for being invited into the program committee of the eight International Symposium on Business Modeling and Software Design (BMSD 2018), which will take place on 2-4 July in WU Vienna, Austria.
A month in Vienna
My one month visit as a researcher on Vienna University of Economics and Business has finished. From the professional manner, I've definitively achieved stated objectives. I've got insights into the pedagogical approaches and contents of the hosting institution, where I already applied some novelties (e.g. updated courses descriptions, and new thesis's topics). I've participated in several …
ERP Future 2017
Very honored to be invited into the program committee of the ERP Future 2017 - research conference, which is held on September 19th, 2017 at the University of Innsbruck (ERP Future 2017, CFP), Austria.
Pitfalls of selected observation and over-generalization
I've prepared an illustration, which tries to illustrate why and how people may get so different opinions about the same real-world phenomena. The explanation is based on two pitfalls common also in scientific research: selected observation and over-generalization. As evident from figure, two individuals (person A and person B) may observe the same group of …
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