In Pega Process Mining, filters are fundamental tools that shift analysis perspective and context based on attributes in the data. By applying filters, you shape the process data to focus on specific problems and opportunities, compare different scenarios, and find patterns to better understand the causes of inefficiencies.
Filtering by date interval

To help you manage the amount of data loaded during analysis, the system always applies an Interval filter to the View. To change this filter, in the upper-right corner of the page, adjust the Interval slider.

- For datasets with more than 500,000 events, the Interval slider initially limits the dataset to only show Cases within the last 20% of the entire date interval.
- For datasets with 500,000 events or fewer, the Interval slider shows the entire interval for the dataset.

Applying filters
To analyze processes effectively, you need to look at different slices and perspectives of the data. For this reason, Pega Process Mining offers many different ways to filter the data. As one example, if you click an activity on a Process Map, you can access filter options from the activity card:
When you select a filter, the system applies the filter globally to the other main areas of application, such as the Process Map, Replay, Analyses pages, and Dashboards. For example, if you select filters on the Process Map and then shift your analysis to a Dashboard, the Dashboard reflects the same filters. Maintaining filters across the View in this way provides continuity as you analyze your data.
When you apply filters, the system adds the filter to the header and updates the Cases and Events percentages included in your current analysis. In the following figure, based on the applied filters, the analysis contains only 1.43% of Events and less than 1% of Cases. If you are analyzing processes for regulatory compliance, then you likely want to continue this very focused analysis, despite the low percentages. If you are in a general process discovery mode, you might decide to change, invert, or remove filters to include more Cases and events.

Filtering on a Dashboard example
On a Dashboard, every bar on a graph and segment of a pie chart offers single-click filtering. Using the following figure as an example, if you want to filter on the roadside assistance Case type, click the bar for Roadside Assistance:


Removing filters
To expedite a shift in your analysis, you can remove filters with a single click. In the header of the application, applied filters display an x that you can click to remove the filter:

Inverting filters
Similarly to removing filters, you can invert filters directly from the application header. In the following figure, the Process Map shows an applied filter on Cases that passed by the Rejected activity. To invert this filter, in the header, hover over the filter and then click the Invert icon:

After inverting the filter, the system applies the filter to the View, updates the filter in the header, and updates the Cases and Events percentages:

Accessing minimized filters in the header
If you apply several filters, the application header displays the most recent filters that fit on the bar and minimizes the other filters. You can easily view these minimized filters by hovering over the icons for the filters. The icon for each filter varies, based on the type of filter. For example, if you applied a filter on an undesired activity, the filter icon is an X. For duration or interval filters, the icon is a calendar. In the following demo, one of the minimized filters is a trace filter, and the icon looks like a bulleted list.
Managing filters

The Filters dialog box displays the Active Filters tab, which lists the filters that are currently applied to the View. From this list, you can create named filters, invert filters, or remove filters.
Filter on Cases is a special filter that you typically want to configure and apply before you begin analysis. You can use this filter to ensure that metrics reflect only historical data by selecting start and end activities.
