{"citation":{"ieee":"G. Engels, A. Förster, R. Heckel, and S. Thöne, “Process Modeling using UML,” in Process-Aware Information Systems, M. Dumas, W. van der Aalst, and A. ter Hofstede, Eds. New York, NY: Wiley, 2005, pp. 85–117.","mla":"Engels, Gregor, et al. “Process Modeling Using UML.” Process-Aware Information Systems, edited by M. Dumas et al., Wiley, 2005, pp. 85–117.","ama":"Engels G, Förster A, Heckel R, Thöne S. Process Modeling using UML. In: Dumas M, van der Aalst W, ter Hofstede A, eds. Process-Aware Information Systems. New York, NY: Wiley; 2005:85-117.","apa":"Engels, G., Förster, A., Heckel, R., & Thöne, S. (2005). Process Modeling using UML. In M. Dumas, W. van der Aalst, & A. ter Hofstede (Eds.), Process-Aware Information Systems (pp. 85–117). New York, NY: Wiley.","bibtex":"@inbook{Engels_Förster_Heckel_Thöne_2005, place={New York, NY}, title={Process Modeling using UML}, booktitle={Process-Aware Information Systems}, publisher={Wiley}, author={Engels, Gregor and Förster, Alexander and Heckel, Reiko and Thöne, Sebastian}, editor={Dumas, M. and van der Aalst, W. and ter Hofstede, A.Editors}, year={2005}, pages={85–117} }","short":"G. Engels, A. Förster, R. Heckel, S. Thöne, in: M. Dumas, W. van der Aalst, A. ter Hofstede (Eds.), Process-Aware Information Systems, Wiley, New York, NY, 2005, pp. 85–117.","chicago":"Engels, Gregor, Alexander Förster, Reiko Heckel, and Sebastian Thöne. “Process Modeling Using UML.” In Process-Aware Information Systems, edited by M. Dumas, W. van der Aalst, and A. ter Hofstede, 85–117. New York, NY: Wiley, 2005."},"user_id":"52534","editor":[{"first_name":"M. ","full_name":"Dumas, M. ","last_name":"Dumas"},{"last_name":"van der Aalst","full_name":"van der Aalst, W. ","first_name":"W. "},{"full_name":"ter Hofstede, A.","last_name":"ter Hofstede","first_name":"A."}],"date_created":"2019-02-05T12:58:16Z","department":[{"_id":"66"}],"_id":"7546","title":"Process Modeling using UML","publisher":"Wiley","abstract":[{"text":"This chapter provides an introduction to the Unified Modeling Language (UML), a widely adopted object-oriented modeling standard, and shows how the language can be applied to (business) process modeling. As major perspectives of process modeling with UML 2.0, the chapter covers control flow, data objects and object flow, organizational structure, business partner interactions, and system-specific process models. Various types of UML diagrams are presented with a special focus on how these diagrams fit together and complement each other to form a coherent view of a process. Moreover, a running example is used throughout the chapter to illustrate the different facets of a process model.","lang":"eng"}],"author":[{"first_name":"Gregor","full_name":"Engels, Gregor","id":"107","last_name":"Engels"},{"first_name":"Alexander","full_name":"Förster, Alexander","last_name":"Förster"},{"first_name":"Reiko","last_name":"Heckel","full_name":"Heckel, Reiko"},{"first_name":"Sebastian","full_name":"Thöne, Sebastian","last_name":"Thöne"}],"status":"public","place":"New York, NY","year":"2005","page":"85-117","publication":"Process-Aware Information Systems","date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:03:39Z","type":"book_chapter","language":[{"iso":"eng"}]}