Communication of business process models via virtual environment simulations


Autoria(s): Brown, Ross A.; Cliquet, Florian
Data(s)

02/12/2008

Resumo

Games and related virtual environments have been a much-hyped area of the entertainment industry. The classic quote is that games are now approaching the size of Hollywood box office sales [1]. Books are now appearing that talk up the influence of games on business [2], and it is one of the key drivers of present hardware development. Some of this 3D technology is now embedded right down at the operating system level via the Windows Presentation Foundations – hit Windows/Tab on your Vista box to find out... In addition to this continued growth in the area of games, there are a number of factors that impact its development in the business community. Firstly, the average age of gamers is approaching the mid thirties. Therefore, a number of people who are in management positions in large enterprises are experienced in using 3D entertainment environments. Secondly, due to the pressure of demand for more computational power in both CPU and Graphical Processing Units (GPUs), your average desktop, any decent laptop, can run a game or virtual environment. In fact, the demonstrations at the end of this paper were developed at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) on a standard Software Operating Environment, with an Intel Dual Core CPU and basic Intel graphics option. What this means is that the potential exists for the easy uptake of such technology due to 1. a broad range of workers being regularly exposed to 3D virtual environment software via games; 2. present desktop computing power now strong enough to potentially roll out a virtual environment solution across an entire enterprise. We believe such visual simulation environments can have a great impact in the area of business process modeling. Accordingly, in this article we will outline the communication capabilities of such environments, giving fantastic possibilities for business process modeling applications, where enterprises need to create, manage, and improve their business processes, and then communicate their processes to stakeholders, both process and non-process cognizant. The article then concludes with a demonstration of the work we are doing in this area at QUT.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31450/

Publicador

Business Process Trends

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31450/1/c31450.pdf

http://www.bptrends.com/publicationfiles/12-08-ART-Communication-of-BPM-Models-Brown%26Cliquet.doc-final1.pdf

Brown, Ross A. & Cliquet, Florian (2008) Communication of business process models via virtual environment simulations. BPTrends, 12(9), pp. 1-7.

Direitos

Copyright 2008 Ross Brown and Florian Cliquet

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #080603 Conceptual Modelling #080602 Computer-Human Interaction #080609 Information Systems Management #080111 Virtual Reality and Related Simulation #Business Process Modelling #YAWL #Second Life
Tipo

Journal Article