3.8 Proceedings Paper

Process Mining and the Black Swan: An Empirical Analysis of the Influence of Unobserved Behavior on the Quality of Mined Process Models

Journal

BUSINESS PROCESS MANAGEMENT WORKSHOPS (BPM 2017)
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages 256-268

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-74030-0_19

Keywords

Process mining; Process discovery; Evaluation metrics Process model quality

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In this paper, we present the epistomological problem of induction, illustrated by the metaphor of the black swan, and its relevance for Process Mining. The quality of mined models is typically measured in terms of four dimensions, namely fitness, precision, simplicity, and generalization. Both precision and generalization rely on the definition of unobserved behavior,i.e. traces not contained in the log. This paper is intended to analyze the influence of unobserved behavior, the potential black swan, has on the quality of mined models. We conduct an empirical analysis to investigate the relation between a system, its observed and unobserved behavior and the mined models. The results show that the unobserved behavior, mainly determined by the nature of the unknown system, can have a significant impact on the quality assessment of mined models, hence eliciting the need to explicate and discuss the assumptions underlying the notions of unobserved behavior in more depth.

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