Distributed and Parallel Databases
A BPMN Extension for the Modeling of Security Requirements in Business Processes
IEICE - Transactions on Information and Systems
Candidate interoperability standards: An ontological overlap analysis
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Time to rethink health care and ICT?
Communications of the ACM - Smart business networks
A survey of comparative business process modeling approaches
BIS'07 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Business information systems
Exception handling in the BPEL4WS language
BPM'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Business process management
What makes process models understandable?
BPM'07 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Business process management
On the suitability of BPMN for business process modelling
BPM'06 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Business Process Management
A study of the evolution of the representational capabilities of process modeling grammars
CAiSE'06 Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering
Realizing model driven security for inter-organizational workflows with WS-CDL and UML 2.0
MoDELS'05 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems
EPEW'05/WS-FM'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on European Performance Engineering, and Web Services and Formal Methods, international conference on Formal Techniques for Computer Systems and Business Processes
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Web services composition is an emerging paradigm for enabling inter and intra organizational integration, and a landscape of languages and techniques for modeling business processes in web service based environments has emerged and is continuously being enriched. With the advent of modeling standards, different business sectors are investigating the options for modeling their workflows. In terms of business process modeling, healthcare is a rather complex sector of activity. Indeed, modeling healthcare processes presents special requirements dictated by the complicated and dynamic nature of these processes as well as by the specificity and diversity of the actors involved in these processes. Little effort has been dedicated to evaluating the capabilities and limitations of modeling languages based on healthcare requirements. This paper presents a set of healthcare modeling requirements and proposes an evaluation framework for process modeling languages based on these requirements. The suitability of two major process based service composition languages, namely BPEL and WS-CDL, is evaluated.