The Influence of Using Collapsed Sub-Processes and Groups on the Understandability of Business Process Models
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Date
2020
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Open Access Color
HYBRID
Green Open Access
Yes
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Many factors influence the creation of business process models which are understandable for a target audience. Understandability of process models becomes more critical when size and complexity of the models increase. Using vertical modularization to decompose such models hierarchically into modules is considered to improve their understandability. To investigate this assumption, two experiments were conducted. The experiments involved 2 large-scale real-life business process models that were modeled using BPMN v2.0 (Business Process Model and Notation) in the form of collaboration diagrams. Each process was modeled in 3 modularity forms: fully-flattened, flattened where activities are clustered using BPMN groups, and modularized using separately viewed BPMN sub-processes. The objective was to investigate if and how different forms of modularity representation (used for vertical modularization) in BPMN collaboration diagrams influence the understandability of process models. In addition to the forms of modularity representation, the presentation medium (paper vs. computer) and model reader's level of business process modeling competency were investigated as factors that potentially influence model comprehension. 60 business practitioners from a large organization and 140 graduate students participated in our experiments. The results indicate that, when these three modularity representations are considered, it is best to present the model in a 'flattened' form (with or without the use of groups) and in the 'paper' format in order to optimally understand a BPMN model. The results also show that the model reader's business process modeling competency is an important factor of process model comprehension.
Description
Keywords
Business process model, Understandability, Comprehension, Modularity, Vertical modularization, Presentation medium, Business process modeling competency, Understandability, COMPLEXITY, Modularity, BPMN, USER ACCEPTANCE, HIERARCHY, Business process model, Presentation medium, EXPRESSIVENESS, QUALITY, Sub-process, Group, Business process modeling competency, Comprehension, Vertical modularization
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
18
Source
Business & Information Systems Engineering
Volume
62
Issue
2
Start Page
121
End Page
141
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Citations
CrossRef : 19
Scopus : 20
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 45
SCOPUS™ Citations
20
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
17
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Page Views
1358
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Downloads
119
checked on Apr 27, 2026
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