Conference Proceedings
Learning When to Treat Business Processes: Prescriptive Process Monitoring with Causal Inference and Reinforcement Learning
Zahra Dasht Bozorgi, Marlon Dumas, Marcello La Rosa, Artem Polyvyanyy, Mahmoud Shoush, Irene Teinemaa, M Indulska (ed.), I Reinhartz-Berger (ed.), C Cetina (ed.), O Pastor (ed.)
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) | Springer Nature Switzerland | Published : 2023
Abstract
Increasing the success rate of a process, i.e. the percentage of cases that end in a positive outcome, is a recurrent process improvement goal. At runtime, there are often certain actions (a.k.a. treatments) that workers may execute to lift the probability that a case ends in a positive outcome. For example, in a loan origination process, a possible treatment is to issue multiple loan offers to increase the probability that the customer takes a loan. Each treatment has a cost. Thus, when defining policies for prescribing treatments to cases, managers need to consider the net gain of the treatments. Also, the effect of a treatment varies over time: treating a case earlier may be more effectiv..
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Awarded by Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Funding Acknowledgements
Research funded by the Australian Research Council (grant DP180102839), the European Research Council (PIX Project), and the Estonian Research Council (grant PRG1226).