Szczegóły publikacji

Opis bibliograficzny

Process Mining for heavy industries: lessons learned from mining use cases / Edyta BRZYCHCZY // W: Mining a scientist's process : essays dedicated to Wil van der Aalst on the occasion of his 60th birthday / eds. Jan Mendling, [et al.]. — Cham : Springer, cop. 2026. — ( Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; ISSN  0302-9743 ; LNCS 16480 ). — ISBN: 978-3-032-17617-2; e-ISBN: 978-3-032-17618-9. — s. 616–630. — Bibliogr., Abstr. — Publikacja dostępna online od: 2026-03-30

Autor

Słowa kluczowe

process miningheavy industrysensor dataevent abstractioncase identificationprocess modeling

Dane bibliometryczne

ID BaDAP166975
Data dodania do BaDAP2026-04-17
DOI10.1007/978-3-032-17618-9_40
Rok publikacji2026
Typ publikacjifragment książki
Otwarty dostęptak
WydawcaSpringer
Czasopismo/seriaLecture Notes in Computer Science

Abstract

Process Mining (PM) has shown great potential in business domains; however, its application in heavy industries remains limited. The main reasons are the dominance of raw sensor data, which requires preprocessing and abstraction, and the variability of industrial process execution. Based on mining cases studied in various research teams, this paper presents lessons that illustrate both the challenges and opportunities of applying PM in industrial contexts. We identified two key challenges: (1) constructing suitable event logs from heterogeneous sensor data, supported by domain knowledge, and (2) selecting modeling approaches that cope with process complexity and variability while serving the analytical objective. Our research focused on event log creation through case identification, event abstraction, and labeling techniques, including recent advances in utilizing Large Language Models (LLMs) for event abstraction. We also compared imperative, declarative, and hybrid modeling paradigms, highlighting their different capacities to represent variability of real-life processes. Based on mining experiences, the paper presents lessons transferable to other heavy industry sectors, demonstrating the potential of PM to analyze complex processes and support data-driven decision-making.