NIMBioS Morsels: Shelby Scott on process mining

Join us on Thursday, March 19, at 4 pm US Eastern Time, for Dr. Shelby Scott’s presentation on the process mining software Celonis. No registration required; join us at http://vss.nimbios.org/

Abstract

In 2011, a group of three students developed the first iteration of Celonis, a process mining software. Celonis is now a best-in-class process- and system-agnostic software and can be used across research, teaching, and industry applications. In this talk, I will present a brief background into process mining and process intelligence, focusing on its existing applications to biological systems and demonstrating additional, potential uses.

Biography

Photo of Dr. Shelby Scott, showing a person wearing a white sweater with arms crossed on a blue background
Photo of Dr. Shelby Scott

Dr. Shelby Scott is a Public Sector Lead Value Engineer at Celonis. Following completing her Masters and PhD at the University of Tennessee, Shelby spent 5 years as a Health Data Scientist at Guidehouse, primarily serving public sector clients including the CDC, state and local health departments, and the Administration for Children and Families. At Celonis, she sits between the sales and technical teams to understand customer needs, convert them to technical requirements, and implement the software. As Celonis is a software built out of Applied Mathematics, Shelby has applied many of the lessons she learned at NIMBioS to her post-academic career.

    Comments closed

    Mission

    Our mission is to foster the growth of transdisciplinary approaches within mathematics and biology

    Contact

    contact@nimbios.org

    1122 Volunteer Blvd, Claxton 114
    University of Tennessee
    Knoxville, TN 37996-3410

    Brian O'Meara, Interim Director

    NIMBioS

    From 2008 until early 2021, NIMBioS was supported by the National Science Foundation through NSF Award #DBI-1300426, with additional support from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.  Any options, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
    Stay updated on all things NIMBioS