CEURART submission formatting guidelines. The length of the paper should be at most 5 pages, everything included (references etc.).
The paper should contain at least the following parts:
- Title, authors, and affiliations;
- An abstract (of no more than 100 words);
- An introduction section, which, among others, should highlight the significance of the tool or resource to the BPM field;
- A section discussing the innovations of the tool or resource to the BPM community and its main characteristics or features;
For tool demonstrations:
- A section describing the maturity of the tool. For this section, one could provide a brief description of case studies performed using the tool, provide scalability data or pointers indicating where readers can find more information about these case studies;
- A link to a video that screencasts and demonstrates the tool, preferably including voice, which must not be longer than 4 minutes;
- A link to the tool (e.g., a link to a web page where to download or use the tool). If the tool requires a license, a paper’s or tutorial’s appendix should describe how to obtain a (temporary) license. The procedure to obtain the license must not disclose the identity of the reviewers. The appendix will not be included in the final version for the proceedings, if the demo is accepted. The reviewers must be able to execute and understand the tool, a short “get it started” is recommended.
For resource expositions:
- A section describing the data model and schema of the resource. The reader should understand from this section how to interpret and gather information from the exposed resource;
- A section describing a preliminary analysis conducted on, or with the aid of, the resource. For this section, it is necessary that the procedure to obtain the results is clearly linked to the exposed resource;
- A publicly accessible and persistently available link (e.g., GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket, Zenodo, B2share) to download and cite the resource. The web page must not require a registration procedure that unveils the identity of reviewers. In addition, it has to contain:
- Download, loading and usage instructions, and
- License specification.
Submission and Review Process
Demo and resource papers should be submitted through the BPM 2025 EasyChair submission site.
All demo and resource submissions will be reviewed by the Demos & Resources Program Committee. The Committee will also vote on the best contribution to receive the “BPM 2025 Best Demos and Resources Award”.
Accepted demo and resource papers will be submitted for publication to CEUR (indexed by DBLP and SCOPUS) and posted along with their videos on the BPM 2025 web page.
If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact: [email protected].
At the Conference
At least one author of the paper is required to register, attend the conference, and present the tool or resource during the Demo & Resources session.
Important Dates
- Demo submission:
26 June 2025
- Notification:
14 July 2025
- Camera-ready submission:
21 July 2025
Deadlines correspond to Anywhere on Earth (AoE or UTC-12).
Demos and Resources Chairs
- Francesca Zerbato, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
- Alfonso Eduardo Marquez-Chamorro, University of Sevilla, Spain
- Iris Beerepoot, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
PC Members
- Simone Agostinelli, Universitas Mercatorum, Italy
- Saimir Bala, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany
- Alessandro Berti, Process and Data Science Department - RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Marco Comuzzi, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea
- Vlad Paul Cosma, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
- Johannes De Smedt, KU Leuven, Belgium
- Chiara Di Francescomarino, DISI - University of Trento, Italy
- Rik Eshuis, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
- Laura Genga, Eindhoven University of Technology, Italy
- Jerome Geyer-Klingeberg, University of Augsburg, Germany
- Christian Janiesch, TU Dortmund University, Germany
- Gert Janssenswillen, Universiteit Hasselt, Belgium
- Sander J.J. Leemans, RWTH Aachen, Australia
- Francesco Leotta, Dipartimento di Informatica e Sistemistica (DIS) “A. Ruberti”, Univerità “Sapienza” Roma, Italy
- Hugo A. LĂłpez, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
- Giovanni Meroni, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
- Roberto Nai, Department of Computer Science - University of Torino, Italy
- Marco Pegoraro, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Domenico Potena, UniversitĂ Politecnica delle Marche, Italy
- Massimiliano Ronzani, FBK, Italy
- Mattia Salnitri, University of Bergamo, Italy
- Ronny Seiger, University of St.Gallen, Switzerland
- Marcos SepĂşlveda, Pontificia Universidad CatĂłlica de Chile, Chile
- Emilio Sulis, University of Turin, Italy
- Francesco Tiezzi, UniversitĂ di Firenze, Italy
- Victoria Torres, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain
- Han van der Aa, University of Vienna, Austria
- Karolin Winter, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands