Published March 24, 2022 | Version v1
Conference paper Restricted

When to intervene? Prescriptive Process Monitoring Under Uncertainty and Resource Constraints

  • 1. University of Tartu

Description

Prescriptive process monitoring approaches leverage historical data to prescribe runtime interventions that will likely prevent negative case outcomes or improve the process’s performance. A centerpiece of a prescriptive process monitoring method is its intervention policy: a decision function that determines if and when to trigger an intervention on an ongoing case. Previous proposals in this field rely on intervention policies that consider only the current state of a given case. These approaches do not consider the tradeoff between triggering an intervention in the current state, given the level of uncertainty of the underlying predictive models, versus delaying the intervention to a later state. Moreover, they assume that there is always a resource available to perform an intervention (infinite capacity). This paper addresses these gaps by introducing a prescriptive process monitoring method that filters and
ranks ongoing cases based on prediction scores, prediction uncertainty, and the causal effect of the intervention, and triggers interventions to maximize a gain function, considering the available resources. The proposal is evaluated using a real-life event log. The results show that the proposed method outperforms existing baselines in terms of total gain.

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