Virtual business role-play: Leveraging familiar environments to prime stakeholder memory during process elicitation

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Abstract

Business process models have traditionally been an effective way of examining business practices to identify areas for improvement. While common information gathering approaches are generally efficacious, they can be quite time consuming and have the risk of developing inaccuracies when information is forgotten or incorrectly interpreted by analysts. In this study, the potential of a role-playing approach for process elicitation and specification has been examined. This method allows stakeholders to enter a virtual world and role-play actions as they would in reality. As actions are completed, a model is automatically developed, removing the need for stakeholders to learn and understand a modelling grammar. Empirical data obtained in this study suggests that this approach may not only improve both the number of individual process task steps remembered and the correctness of task ordering, but also provide a reduction in the time required for stakeholders to model a process view.

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Harman, J., Brown, R., Johnson, D., Rinderle-Ma, S., & Kannengiesser, U. (2015). Virtual business role-play: Leveraging familiar environments to prime stakeholder memory during process elicitation. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 9097, pp. 166–180). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19069-3_11

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