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Advanced Information Systems Engineering
29th International Conference CAiSE 2017
Essen, Germany, June 12-16, 2017
Proceedings of
CAiSE Forum and Doctoral Consortium Papers
Edited by
Xavier Franch Jolita Ralyté
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Spain
Raimundas Matulevičius Camille Salinesi
University of Tartu, Estonia University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne,
France
Roel Wieringa
University of Twente, The Netherlands
CAiSE 2017
Forum and Doctoral Consortium Papers
Proceedings
This volume of CEUR-WS Proceedings contains 20 Forum and 4 Doctoral
Consortium papers presented at the 29th International Conference on Advanced
Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2017). The conference was held in Essen,
Germany, June 12-16, 2017.
Copyright © 2017 for the individual papers by the papers’ authors. Copying permitted
only for private and academic purposes. This volume is published and copyrighted by
its editors.
CEUR-WS.org, ISSN 1613-0073
CAiSE 2017 Forum Foreword
The objective of the CAiSE conferences is to provide a forum for the exchange of
experience, research results, ideas and prototypes between the research community
and industry, in the field of information systems engineering. Along almost three
decades, the conference has become the yearly worldwide meeting point for the
information system engineering community. This year, the 29th edition of the CAiSE
conference is held in Essen, Germany, from the 12th to the 6th of June 2017.
One of the usual tracks in the CAiSE conference is the Forum, and this year is not
an exception. The Forum sessions facilitate the interaction, discussion, and exchange
of ideas among presenters and participants. Intended to serve as an interactive
platform, the Forum aims at the presentation of emerging new topics and
controversial positions, as well as demonstration of innovative systems, tools and
applications. In accordance, two types of submissions have been called to the Forum:
Visionary papers presenting innovative research projects, which are still at a
relatively early stage and do not necessarily include a full-scale validation.
Demo papers describe innovative tools and prototypes that implement the results of
research efforts. The tools and prototypes will be presented as demos in the Forum.
Each submission to the CAiSE’17 Forum was reviewed by three Program
Committee members. Only those submissions for which there was an agreement on
the relevance, novelty and rigor were accepted for presentation in the Forum.
Additionally, some papers were invited to the Forum as a result of the evaluation
process in the main conference. All in all, there was a total of 20 papers that were
presented as part of the main conference program. The presenters gave a 3-minute
elevator pitch and were available to discuss their work through a poster and/or system
demonstration in a dedicated session. The 8-page papers describing the works are
compiled in these proceedings.
We would like to thank everyone who contributed to CAiSE’17 Forum. First, to
our excellent Program Committee members who provided thorough evaluation of the
papers and contributed to the promotion of the event. We thank all the authors who
submitted and presented papers to the Forum for having shared their work with the
community. Last, we would like to thank the CAiSE’17 Program Committee and
General Chairs as well as the Local Organization Committee for their support.
June 2017
Xavier Franch
Jolita Ralyté
CAiSE Forum Co-Chairs
CAiSE’17 Forum Co-Chairs
Xavier Franch Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
Jolita Ralyté University of Geneva, Switzerland
CAiSE’17 Forum Committee
Carina Alves Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Brasil
Said Assar Institut Mines-Telecom, France
Juan Pablo Carvallo CEDIA; Universidad De Cuenca, Ecuador
Dolors Costal Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
Rébecca Deneckère Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France
Deepak Dhungana Siemens, Austria
Christophe Feltus Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology,
Luxembourg
Agnès Front University of Grenoble, France
Smita Ghaisas Tata, India
Chiara Ghidini Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Italy
Irit Hadar University of Haifa, Israel
Jennifer Horkoff University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Marta Indulska University of Queensland, Australia
Haruhiko Kaiya Kanagawa University, Japan
Evangelia Kavakli University of the Aegean, Greece
Christian Kop Alpen-Adria-Universitaet Klagenfurt, Austria
Dejan Lavbič University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Lysanne Lessard University of Ottawa, Canada
Emmanuel Letier University College London, UK
Grace Lewis Software Engineering Institute, USA
Gilles Perrouin University of Namur, Belgium
Pilar Rodríguez University of Oulu, Finland
Marcela Ruiz Utrecht University, Netherlands
Arnon Sturm Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Gianluigi Viscusi EPFL, Switzerland
Yong Xia IBM China, China
Additional Reviewers
Faeq Alrimawi
Sorren Hanvey
Giulio Petrucci
CAiSE 2017 Doctoral Consortium Foreword
The CAiSE 2017 Doctoral Consortium (DC) was the 24th Doctoral Consortium of a
series held in conjunction with the International CAiSE conference. It brought
together PhD students working on foundations, techniques, tools and applications of
Information Systems Engineering and provided them with an opportunity to present
and discuss their research to an audience of peers and senior faculty in a supportive
environment. The CAiSE 2017 DC was a unique opportunity to:
− Get fruitful feedback and advice to the selected Doctoral students on their
research project;
− Meet experts from different backgrounds working on topics related to the
Information Systems Engineering field;
− Interact with other Doctoral students and stimulate an exchange of ideas and
suggestions among participants;
− Discuss concerns about research, supervision, the job market, and other career-
related issues.
The doctoral students involved were selected after a careful evaluation process of
their papers by a couple of senior academics. Besides, the common quality, originality
and thematic criteria, candidates had to have at least 6-12 months of work remaining
before expected completion (and at least 12 months of work already performed), so as
to fully benefit from the Doctoral Consortium. Based on the recommendations
provided by the mentors, papers were revised before publication in the proceedings. A
collection of 4 papers was selected then presented at the meeting:
In Stage-based Business Process Mining Hoang Nguyen presented a set of
techniques for process mining at the process stages. The major goals of the research
were to extract business process stages from the event logs, to mine process logs and
to perform predictive process monitoring at different process stages. The paper
reports on the preliminary results for discovering process stages and for mining
process logs based on the process stages.
Christian Fleig presented the paper Towards the Design of a Process Mining-
Enabled Decision Support System for Digital Business Process Transformation. The
author proposed the process-mining enabled decision support systems to guide
development and transformations of the business processes.
Towards Operationalization of Business Models: Designing Service Compositions
for Service-Dominant Business Models by Bambang Suratno considered
transformations of the business process models to the service compositions. A
successful composition requires understanding of the essential properties and
guidance for the service composition and execution.
Alex Mircoli in his presentation of Automatic Emotional Text Annotation Using
Facial Expression Analysis discussed the approach to enrich textual information with
the emotional aspects. The major challenge of this study is to explain how to capture
such an information from the speech and video presentations.
Last but not least the CAiSE DC featured a short tutorial on the research methods
given by Prof. Roel Wieringa.
We would like to thank warmly the DC mentors for their dedication and advice to
the doctoral students. We hope students could fully benefit from all advices that were
provided about their papers and during the meeting, and we wish them a long and
fruitful career in research and higher education.
June 2017
Raimundas Matulevičius
Camille Salinesi
Roel Wieringa
CAiSE 2017 DC Co-Chairs
Doctoral Consortium Co-Chairs
Raimundas Matulevičius University of Tartu, Estonia
Camille Salinesi Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France
Roel Wieringa University of Twente, The Netherlands
Doctoral Consorium Mentors
Marite Kirikova Riga Technical University, Latvia
Selmin Nurcan Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, France
Oscar Pastor Universitat Politècnica de Valencia, Spain
Barbara Pernici Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Hans Weigand Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Jelena Zdravkovic Stockholm University, Sweden
Table of Contents
CAiSE 2017 Forum Papers
1
A Data-Driven Approach to Improve the Process of Data-Intensive API
Creation and Evolution
Alberto Abelló, Claudia Ayala, Carles Farré, Cristina Gómez, Marc Oriol,
and Oscar Romero
Smart Logistics: An Enterprise Architecture Perspective 9
Prince M. Singh, Marten van Sinderen, Roel Wieringa
Enriching Business Artifacts with Coordination 17
Matteo Baldoni, Cristina Baroglio, Federico Capuzzimati, and Roberto
Micalizio
EthDrive: A Peer-to-Peer Data Storage with Provenance 25
Xiao Liang Yu, Xiwei Xu, and Bin Liu
Hybrid Remote Expert - an Emerging Pattern of Industrial Remote Support 33
Ethan Hadar, Joseph Shtok, Benjamin Cohen, Yochay Tzur, and Leonid
Karlinsky
XES Tensorflow – Process Prediction using the Tensorflow Deep-Learning 41
Framework
Joerg Evermann, Jana-Rebecca Rehse, and Peter Fettke
A Process Mining Based Model for Customer Journey Mapping 49
Gaël Bernard and Periklis Andritsos
VarMeR – A Variability Mechanisms Recommender for Software Artifacts 57
Iris Reinhartz-Berger and Anna Zamansky
Cloudy with a Chance of Usage? – Towards a Model of Cloud Computing 65
Adoption in German SME
Robert Deil and Philipp Brune
Model Fragment Reuse Driven by Requirements 73
Raúl Lapeña, Jaime Font, Carlos Cetina, and Óscar Pastor
Regerator: a Registry Generator for Blockchain 81
An Binh Tran, Xiwei Xu, Ingo Weber, Mark Staples, and Paul Rimba
Regression Testing for Visual Models 89
Ralf Laue, Arian Storch, and Markus Schnädelbach
Privacy Level Agreements for Public Administration Information Systems 97
Vasiliki Diamantopoulou, Michalis Pavlidis, and Haralambos Mouratidis
Artifact-driven Process Monitoring: Dynamically Binding Real-world Objects 105
to Running Processes
Giovanni Meroni, Claudio Di Ciccio, and Jan Mendling
GH4RE: Repository Recommendation on GitHub for Requirements Elicitation 113
Reuse
Roxana Lisette Quintanilla Portugal, Marco Antonio Casanova, Tong Li,
and Julio Cesar Sampaio do Prado Leite
Improving Problem Resolving on the Shop Floor by Context-Aware Decision 121
Information Packages
Eva Hoos, Pascal Hirmer, and Bernhard Mitschang
Information Logistics and Fog Computing: The DITAS* Approach 129
Pierluigi Plebani, David Garcia-Perez, Maya Anderson, David Bermbach,
Cinzia Cappiello, Ronen I. Kat, Frank Pallas, Barbara Pernici, Stefan Tai,
and Monica Vitali
Towards Multi-decision-maker Requirements Prioritisation via Multi-Objective 137
Optimisation
Fitsum Meshesha Kifetew, Angelo Susi, Denisse Muñante, Anna Perini,
Alberto Siena, and Paolo Busetta
An Empirical Evaluation to Identify Conflicts Among Quality Attributes in 145
Web Services Monitoring
Jael Zela Ruiz and Cecilia M. F. Rubira
Business Process Modelling for a Data Exchange Platform 153
Christoph Quix, Arnab Chakrabarti, Sebastian Kleff, and Jaroslav Pullmann
CAiSE 2017 Doctoral Consortium Papers
Stage-based Business Process Mining 161
Hoang Nguyen
Towards the Design of a Process Mining-Enabled Decision Support System for 170
Business Process Transformation
Christian Fleig
Towards Operationalization of Business Models: Designing Service 179
Compositions for Service-Dominant Business Models
Bambang Suratno
Automatic Emotional Text Annotation Using Facial Expression Analysis 188
Alex Mircoli