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**                  BPM 2024                   **
** 22nd Business Process Management Conference **
**                Sep. 1-6, 2024               **
**                Krakow, Poland               **
**            https://bpm2024.agh.edu.pl       **
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### Call for Research Papers

The International Conference on Business Process Management (BPM) is the 
premium forum for researchers and practitioners in the field of BPM. The 
conference embraces the interdisciplinary nature of BPM to its fullest extent. 
To this end, the conference explicitly seeks to bring together the finest 
research contributions and viewpoints from the fields of computer science, 
information systems engineering, and information systems management. The 
objective is to enhance or refine the existing portfolio of theories, methods, 
and tools for managing and improving business processes.

To accommodate this diversity, the BPM conference is structured into three 
tracks: Foundations, Engineering, and Management. Each track covers different 
phenomena of interest and research methods. Accordingly, each track has 
specific evaluation criteria, a separate track chair, and a dedicated program 
committee, as described below.

### Key Dates

Paper abstract submission: 1 March 2024
Paper submission: 8 March 2024
Notification to authors: 17 May 2024
Camera-ready submission: 14 June 2024
Conference: 1-6 September 2024


### Track I: Foundations
Track Chair: Andrea Marrella, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

Track I invites papers that have a foundational nature, that is a formal, 
mathematical, conceptual or philosophical nature. It focuses on (i) papers 
investigating the underlying principles of BPM, computational theories, formal 
methods and algorithms for modelling, automating and analysing business 
processes; (ii) papers identifying novel problems, novel languages, 
architectures and other concepts underlying process-aware information systems, 
as well as conceptual papers on frameworks, taxonomies, patterns and that use 
conceptual modelling techniques to investigate problems in the design and 
analysis of BPM systems.

As papers in this track are not expected to propose an immediate application in 
concrete business environments, empirical evaluation is not required. Instead, 
determining factors will be their technical quality in terms of computer 
science standards (e.g., sound formalization, rigorous research method, clear 
description of the problem tackled and positioning concerning state of the art, 
convincing argumentation and benefits of the contribution) and the degree to 
which the developed foundations permit new ways of modelling or analyzing BPM 
systems.

You should send your paper to Track I if one or more of the following applies:
* It provides foundational insights about the underlying principles and 
concepts of BPM.
* It advances state of the art in BPM through the investigation of formal 
methods and algorithms.
* It identifies novel problems in BPM and contributes to their definition 
through languages, architectures, conceptual models, frameworks, patterns and 
taxonomies for BPM.
* It demonstrates technical quality and shows how the developed foundations 
permit new ways of modelling or analyzing BPM systems.


### Track II: Engineering
Track Chair: Manuel Resinas, University of Seville, Spain

Track II invites papers that deal with engineering aspects of BPM research. The 
focus is on the investigation of artefacts and systems that aim to solve 
concrete problems in business environments.
Track II covers tools and techniques for process modelling, the enactment of 
process models as well as process monitoring and analytics (including process 
mining techniques). It covers the usage of such artefacts and systems in 
particular domains, such as digital health, smart mobility, logistics, or smart 
government. It also covers aspects related to the interaction between processes 
and software infrastructure and services.

All papers in this track must include rigorous and reproducible empirical 
evaluations that demonstrate the merits of the artefact introduced. A 
self-critical discussion of limitations and threats to validity is expected. If 
the artefact is based on Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques, the 
contribution cannot be a mere application of existing techniques. Instead, an 
adequate justification of the adaptations to the AI techniques required in the 
BPM context should be provided. Formalization of problems and solutions should 
be used if they add clarity or are beneficial in other ways.

You should send your paper to Track II if one or more of the following applies:

* It proposes a significant contribution in BPM in the form of a novel artefact 
or system.
* Its results are empirically evaluated in a rigorous and reproducible manner 
(reproducibility includes * making available the data, code and other relevant 
aspects of the evaluation).
* It reports on an artefact or system you designed, with a maturity of at least 
a prototype, i.e., it can be evaluated in an application context.


### Track III: Management
Track Chair: Mieke Jans, Hasselt University, Belgium

Track III invites papers that focus on the socio-technical, cognitive, 
psychological, managerial and societal aspects of BPM. This includes all 
techniques, tools, and methods that are employed in and across organisations to 
better govern business processes. Research papers that are submitted to this 
track aim to advance our understanding of how process management (and mining) 
concepts, along with the underlying information systems can deliver business 
value.

In particular, we seek contributions that (1) propose novel organizational and 
technology-enabled modes of BPM, (2) advance our understanding of how 
organizations can develop process-oriented capabilities, or (3) examine the 
(cross-)organizational or managerial impact of novel BPM affordances as well as 
their context. Areas of interest include, but are not limited to, strategic 
alignment, governance, methods, information technology, people, and culture; as 
long as there is a significant link to business process management. Further, 
all levels of analysis (individual, team, organization, or ecosystem) are 
welcome.

Papers may use various research methodologies, including case study research, 
action research, experiments, focus group research, survey research, or design 
science research. Papers will be evaluated according to current management and 
information systems standards. These include an appropriate motivation and 
framing of the research study and methodology, rigorous application of the 
selected research method, convincing argumentation of design choices, 
positioning against state-of-the-art, and, wherever possible, demonstration of 
the findings’ applicability and evaluation of the results’ efficacy.

You should send your paper to Track III if one or more of the following applies:

* It tackles an organizational or societal challenge from a process-oriented 
perspective.
* It considers all socio-technical aspects: technology, task, and people.
* It extends the BPM body of knowledge to better contribute to process 
innovation, process-related digitalization, process analysis, and 
organizational routines.
* It builds on and draws from real-world organizational endeavors in BPM.


### Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

The BPM community is committed to the promotion of diversity, equity, and 
inclusion (DEI) in all aspects of our professional activities. We celebrate the 
diversity in our community and welcome everyone regardless of age, gender 
identity, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic background, country of origin, 
religion, sexual orientation, physical ability, education, and work experience. 
We encourage all participants to consider DEI in their writing, reviews, 
presentations, and all interactions related to the BPM conference.

### Open Science Principles

The BPM conference encourages authors of research papers to follow the 
principles of transparency, reproducibility, and replicability. In particular, 
the conference supports the adoption of open data and open source principles 
and encourages authors to disclose (anonymized and curated) data in order to 
increase reproducibility and replicability.

The evaluation form for research papers will include an item explicitly asking 
reviewers if the research artefacts (e.g., prototypes, interview protocols, 
questionnaires) or the datasets (used in, or produced by, the empirical 
evaluation) reported in the paper are available in a suitable form. To this 
end, authors are asked to include in their manuscript links to private or 
public repositories where reviewers can find the research artefacts associated 
with the paper. This information may be included, for example, in a “Data 
availability” or “Reproducibility” subsection. This requirement does not apply 
to papers that neither involve an empirical study nor a prototype 
implementation.

Authors who prefer not to make their research artefacts and datasets accessible 
to the program committee are asked to comment in their submitted manuscript on 
why this is not possible, practical, or desirable. This statement may be 
deleted in the final version of the paper if it gets accepted. Possible reasons 
may involve privacy restrictions or non-disclosure agreements. While sharing 
research artefacts is not mandatory for submission or acceptance, the program 
committee members may use this information to inform their decision.

Authors are encouraged to make the used research artefacts and datasets 
accessible via public repositories (e.g., Zenodo, Figshare, GitHub, or 
institutional archives) under an open data license such as the CC0 dedication 
or the CC-BY 4.0 license. Making research artefacts and datasets available via 
cloud services such as Dropbox or Google Docs is undesirable given the 
volatility of the links produced by these services.

Those accepted papers that include research artefacts or datasets available on 
a publicly accessible archival repository with a DOI will be awarded with an 
“Artifacts Available” badge that will be included in the camera-ready version 
of the paper. The badge will follow the ACM’s artefacts guidelines. This means 
that the research artefacts or datasets publicly available need to be relevant 
to the study and add value beyond the text in the article, but they do not need 
to be complete in the sense of including all components relevant to the paper 
in question. With this badge the conference aims to support authors to provide 
more substantial supplements to their papers so future research can more 
effectively build on and compare with previous work.

Finally, authors are encouraged to self-archive their pre- and post-prints in 
open, preserved repositories, such as their institutional preprint repository, 
arXiv or other non-profit services, in line with Springer’s copyright agreement 
(see “License to Publish form for LNCS, CCIS or LNBIP”, §3, available at 
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines).

### Submission

Each paper must be submitted to exactly one track. Please use the track 
descriptions above to decide where to send your paper. Authors may contact 
track chairs for clarification. Papers must be formatted according to 
Springer’s LNCS formatting guidelines. Submissions must be in English and 
cannot exceed 16 pages including references and appendices. The title page must 
contain a short abstract clarifying the relation of the paper with the topics 
above. The paper must clearly state the problem being addressed, the goal of 
the work, the results achieved, and the relation to other work.

Papers must be submitted electronically in PDF format via the BPM 2024 
EasyChair submission site.

Submissions must be original contributions that have neither been published 
previously nor submitted to other conferences or journals while being submitted 
to BPM 2024.

Accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings published by 
Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. For each 
accepted paper, at least one author must register for the conference and 
present the paper. Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit an 
extended version to a special issue of the newly founded Springer journal 
‘Process Science’.

### Double-Blind Review

BPM 2024 reviews are double blind. Thus, neither reviewers nor authors should 
be able to identify each other. The first page, on which the paper body begins, 
should include the title, abstract and keywords, but not names or affiliations 
of the authors. Acknowledgments of funding or assistance should be omitted. 
Ensure that no information is included that would identify the authors or their 
affiliations (even in the PDF meta-data). Supplementary material and code 
should also be anonymized (including, for instance, hardcoded paths or URLs 
that may give away login identifiers or institutions). Papers including such 
information may be rejected at the discretion of the PC chairs.

Submissions should include references to all published literature relevant to 
the paper. When the authors’ previous work is relevant, we suggest using the 
third person, rather than the first person. For example, say “Previously, in 
[4] the authors showed that…,” rather than “In our previous work [4] we showed 
that…”.

All identifying information will be added to the final camera-ready version of 
accepted papers.

### Awards

The BPM conference will recognize the best papers submitted to the conference 
with an award in two different categories:
- Best paper award
- Best student paper award
Papers eligible for the best student paper award are those whose contribution 
is carried out mainly by one or more (Ph.D.) student(s), although non-students 
(advisors, collaborators, etc.) may appear as authors as well. Student papers 
must be clearly marked as such in the EasyChair system when submitting the 
paper. Student papers must be presented at the conference by a student author 
to be eligible for the best student paper award.
Other than for the award, student papers are treated as any other paper in the 
review process.

### BPM Forum

Innovative papers which have a high potential of stimulating discussion at the 
conference but do not fully meet the quality criteria for the main conference 
will be invited for presentation at the BPM Forum. Those papers will be 
published in full length in a separate post-proceedings volume in the Lecture 
Notes in Business Information Processing (LNBIP) series and be presented during 
the main conference. There will be no short papers.

### Shepherding program

When all authors of a paper are first-time submitters to BPM, they may request 
to be part of the pre-submission shepherding program. Shepherds are selected 
BPM PC members who can advise on the presentation and positioning of a paper. 
Interested candidates are encouraged to contact the PC Chairs by 25 January 
2024, at the latest. Please send your request to bpm2024_f...@easychair.org for 
the Foundations track, to bpm2024_e...@easychair.org for the Engineering track, 
or to bpm2024_m...@easychair.org for the Management track.

### Program Committee Chairs

Michael Rosemann, Queensland University of Technology, Australia (Consolidation 
Chair)
Andrea Marrella, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy (Track Chair, Foundations 
Track)
Manuel Resinas, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain (Track Chair, Engineering Track)
Mieke Jans, Hasselt University, Belgium (Track Chair, Management Track)

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