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Figure 1.

Example workflow model:

Workflow begins at an Activity Initial Node and ends at an Activity Final Node; ovals represent actions in the workflow; diamond represents a decision node, where the subsequent direction in the workflow is dependent on a decision.

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Figure 2.

Activity Diagram for a Clinical Process.

This activity diagram represents the following activity: the patient is submitted to an activity named “Test Procedure” that generates a result. One of results redirects the flow of activity to an activity called “Refer back to GP” and the activity is finished (filled circle with a border). Another result redirects the flow to a “Treatment Preparation” activity. A black bar with two flow leaving it means that the “Procedure X” and “Procedure Y” are executing in parallel. A black bar with one flow leaving it redirects the flow to the last activity called “Arrange next Appointment” and the filled circle with a border finishs the activity. Source: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.6.4217&rep=rep1&type=pdf.

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Figure 3.

A global use case to specific actor use cases.

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Table 1.

Criteria to build a use case for simulation.

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Table 2.

Details on distribution parameters.

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Figure 4.

Summary of time & motion data for actors.

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Figure 5.

Summarization of time & motion data for task activities.

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Figure 6.

Portion of the Activity Diagram created with the UML Profile, highlighting data annotation for “Check the patient”.

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