Stakeholder utility measures for declarative processes and their use in process comparisons
Mark Dukes

TL;DR
This paper introduces a general method for calculating stakeholder utility in declarative processes, enabling process comparison and analysis across social sciences, healthcare, and policy domains.
Contribution
It derives a specific stakeholder utility measure based on process traces and properties, applicable to any declarative process with modal or temporal constraints.
Findings
Utility measure depends on unique process traces
Method enables comparison of different declarative processes
Illustrated with examples from existing literature
Abstract
We present a method for calculating and analyzing stakeholder utilities of processes that arise in, but are not limited to, the social sciences. These areas include business process analysis, healthcare workflow analysis and policy process analysis. This method is quite general and applicable to any situation in which declarative-type constraints of a modal and/or temporal nature play a part. A declarative process is a process in which activities may freely happen while respecting a set of constraints. For such a process, anything may happen so long as it is not explicitly forbidden. Declarative processes have been used and studied as models of business and healthcare workflows by several authors. In considering a declarative process as a model of some system it is natural to consider how the process behaves with respect to stakeholders. We derive a measure for stakeholder utility…
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