International Week in Babeș-Bolyai University 🇷🇴 any 6-hour long course on “Crafting Success: The Art of Business Process Management”

This May, I had a pleasure to take part in International Week in Babeș-Bolyai University (Romania) 🇷🇴 delivering 6-hour long “Crafting Success: The Art of Business Process Management” course for undergraduates, Master and PhD students that was based on the course we (with Marlon Dumas) deliver at the University of Tartu Institute of Computer Science.

As part of this course, we delved deep into the fundamental principles and methods of business process management along the lifecycle of business processes were introduced, providing students with the understanding on:

  1. Process Identification and Organization: students learned how to identify key business processes and organize them into a coherent architecture, laying the foundation for effective management and improvement;
  2. Performance Measurement and Prioritization: we explored methods for defining performance measures and prioritizing initiatives for process improvement, ensuring that efforts are focused on areas that deliver the most significant impact;
  3. Process Modeling and Analysis: through the BPMN notation, students were equipped to capture and analyze business processes effectively, facilitating clear communication and understanding across teams;
  4. Process Redesign: The course also delved into strategies for analyzing and redesigning processes to align with performance objectives, employing transformational and transactional approaches such as Business Process Reengineering (BPR) and redesign heuristics.

Additionally, an overview of BPM tools for process automation and monitoring, highlighting the pivotal role of BPM models in driving the design of IT solutions that support seamless process execution, was provided to students.

One of the most rewarding aspects of the course was witnessing the genuine interest and active participation of our students. Their enthusiasm and engagement presented a delightful challenge when selecting the most outstanding contributors for recognition at the course’s conclusion.

Beyond the confines of our classroom, involvement in the International Week themed “Business Education without Borders” opened doors for students to a myriad of interdisciplinary explorations. From data mining with AI to delving into digital market research ethics, students embarked on a journey encompassing finance, law, accounting, multicultural consumer behavior, supply chain dynamics, and risk management. This immersive experience, enriched by guest lecturers from diverse cultural backgrounds, fostered cross-cultural exchange and equipped participants with invaluable skills and knowledge essential for success in today’s global business landscape.

A heartfelt thank you to the organizers for the opportunity to be part of this enriching experience. While I regret not being able to join in person, I am certain that the event was a resounding success, thanks to the dedication and hard work of everyone involved.

Online International Training and Capacity Building Program-2024 (ITCBP-2024) for the School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi and my talk on “Data Management for AI Cities”

Yesterday, I had the honor of serving as an Expert speaker for an Online International Training and Capacity Building Program-2024 (ITCBP-2024) on “Data Management for AI Cities”, organised by the School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi (SPA FIRST) that invited me to deliver a talk on “Data Visualisation for Cities: City Based Applications”.

During this talk, we touched on several important aspects surrounding data management and visualization in and for cities, including:

  • Data management that was then deduced to data quality management of both internal and external data, departing from understanding these data to managing their quality throughout the DQM lifecycle (stressing that data cleaning is not the same as DQM), touching on several approaches to this with greater emphasis on the AI-augmented data quality management – existing tools, underlying methods, and weaknesses that should be considered when using (semi-)automatic data quality rule recognition, depending on the method they use for this purpose;
  • Data governance was then discussed, stressing how it differs from DQM, and what it consists of and why it is crucial, incl. within the context of this talk;
  • Data visualization & storytellingrole, key principles, common mistakes, best practices. As part of this, we covered strategies for selecting data visualization type with tips on how to simplify this process, incl. by referring to chart selectors, but also stressing why “thinking outside the menu” is critical, esp. within city-level data visualization (where your audience is often citizens or policymakers). We looked at the most common and/or successful uses of non-traditional types of visualizations, incl. tools to be used for these purposes, breaking them into those that require coding and those that are rather low- or no-code; noise reduction – simplicity – strategic accents’ use, as well as drill-down (aka roll-down) & roll-up use to convey the message you want to deliver while overcoming highlighting everything and thereby losing your audience. In addition, a UX perspective was discussed, including but not limited some aspects that are often overlooked when thinking about the design and aesthetic color palette, namely the color-blindness of the audience that might “consume” these visualizations and again, tips on how to use it easier – did you you known that there are 300 million color blind people? And that 98% of those with color blindness have red-green color blindness?

So what was the key message or a “takeaway” of this talk? In a very few words:

  • Understand your data, audience and story you want to tell! Understand:
    • your data,
    • the story it tells,
    • your target audience’s preferences and needs,
    • the story you want to tell
    • data suitability
    • data quality
  • Attention-grabbing visuals & storytelling is a key!
    • reduce noise to avoid audience confusion and distraction
    • use drill-down and roll-up operations to keep visualization simple
    • add the context to provide all necessary information for clear understanding
    • add highlights to focus their attention – add accents strategically
  • Consider design – the optimal visualisation type, chart design, environment design, potential color-blindness of your audience
  • Keep track of the current advances, but also challenges and risks, of data visualization in urban settings, incl. but not limited to (1) privacy concerns, (2) data silos, (3) technological limitations.

All in all, it was quite a rich conversation and I am very grateful to the organizers for the invitation to be part of this event and to the audience for the very positive feedback!

Generative AI Role in Shaping the Future of Open Data Ecosystems: Synergies amidst Paradoxes

The role of Generative AI is the subject for debates in almost every domain today, and the open data (ecosystem) domain is no exception. Here’s my two cents on this with the blog post “Generative AI Role in Shaping the Future of Open Data Ecosystems: Synergies amidst Paradoxes”.
In this blog post, I present some personal observations and predictions on how Generative AI will stop open “data winter” or even give an impetus to the “data spring” the call for what has been made recently. While these steps may be many and different, one obvious element that could affect the current state of affairs is Artificial Intelligence, particularly in the form of Generative AI. Along with this “forecast” and high-level discussion that is expected to be made more in-depth and likely evidence-based (since, together with my colleagues and students, we are already working in this direction), some paradoxes are mentioned among this symbiotic relationship between Generative AI and open data (ecosystem)…

CFP: The International Conference on Intelligent Data Science Technologies and Applications (IDSTA2023)

On behalf of the organizers and as a publicity chair, I sincerely invite you to consider submitting the results of your recent research to The International Conference on Intelligent Data Science Technologies and Applications (IDSTA2023), which will be held in conjunction Kuwait Fintech and Blockchain Summit.

Huge amount of data is being generated and transmitted everyday. To be able to deal with this data, extract useful information from it, store it, transmit it, and represent it, intelligent technologies and applications are needed. The International Conference on Intelligent Data Science Technologies and Applications (IDSTA) is a peer reviewed conference, whose objective is to advance the Data Science field by giving an opportunity for researchers, engineers, and practitioners to present their latest findings in the field. It will also invite key persons in the field to share their current knowledge and their future expectations for the field. Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:

💡Applied Public Affairs, incl. but not limited to Campaign Management, Mass Communication Politics, Political Analysis, Survey Sampling
💡Business Analytics, incl. but not limited to Stock Market Analysis, Predictive Analytics, Business Intelligence
💡Finance, incl. but not limited to Risk Management, Algorithmic Trading, Fraud Detection, Financial Analysis
💡Computer Science, incl. but not limited to Database Management Systems, Scientific Computing, Computer Vision, Fuzzy Computing, Feature Selection, Neural Networks, Deep Learning, Meta-Learning, Process Mining, Artificial Intelligence, Data Mining, Big Data, Web Analytics, Text Mining, Natural Language Processing, Sentiment Analysis, Social Media Analysis, Data Fusion, Performance Analysis and Evaluation, Evolutionary Computing and Optimization, Hybrid Methods, Granular Computing, Recommender Systems, Data Visualization, Predictive Maintenance, Internet of Things (IoT), Web Scraping
💡Sustainability, incl. but not limited to Datasets on Sustainability, Sustainability Modeling, Energy Sustainability, Water Sustainability, Environmental Sustainability, Risk Analysis
💡Cybersecurity, incl. but not limited to Data Privacy and Security, Network Security, Communication Security, Cryptography, Fraud Detection, Blockchain
💡Environmental Science, incl. but not limited to GIS, Climatographic, Remote Sensing, Spatial Data Analysis, Weather Prediction and Tracking,
💡Biotechnologies, incl. but not limited to Gnome Analysis, Drug Discovery and Screening and Side Effect Analysis, Structural and Folding Pattern, Disease Discovery and Classification, Bioinformatics, Next-Gen Sequencing
💡Smart City, incl. but not limited to City Data Management, Smart Traffic, Surveillance, Location-Based Services, Robotics
💡Human Behaviour Understanding
💡Semi-Structured and Unstructured Data
💡Pattern Recognition
💡Transparency in Research Data
💡Data and Information Quality
💡GPU Computing
💡Crowdsourcing


🗓️🗓️🗓️ IMPORTANT DATES

  • Paper submission:  March 15, 2023  
  • Acceptance notification:  May 20th, 2023
  • Full paper camera-ready submission: October 1st, 2023
    Conference Dates: October 24-26, 2023

All papers that are accepted, registered, and presented in IDSTA2023 and the workshops co-located with it will be submitted to IEEEXplore for possible publication. 
For any inquiries, contact intelligenttechorg@gmail.com.

Submit the paper and meet our team in Kuwait in October, 2023!
 

With best wishes,

IDSTA2023 organizers