The Standards Landscape - SISO Standards for Operations, Systems and Ontologies
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Authors
Abbott, Jeff
Blais, Curtis
Cutts, Dannie
Subjects
Advisors
Date of Issue
2011
Date
Fall 2011
Publisher
Language
en_US
Abstract
SISO standards support a great number of domains including applications of services/middleware, simulation systems and operational activities. Horizontally the scope includes synthetic environments, protocols (DIS, HLA, etc), and data models such as the base object model (BOM), SEDRIS, and the Military Scenario Definition Language. Emerging needs are focusing SISO in new directions including service oriented architectures (SOA), battle management language, and format independent Ontologies. There is a critical need to align and integrate SISO development efforts horizontally and vertically. The day of perceiving standards as independent or competitive is giving way to a new era of collaboration and seamless integration. SISO and our stakeholders can begin to build upon the successes of the past to integrate systems into systems of systems level simulation environments. To prepare for these changes this paper outlines potential strategies for SISO by ensuring standards (1) support one another, (2) integrate vertically and horizontally, (3) support management and control across operational simulation environments and (4) integrate services dynamically in support of Live-Virtual-Constructive (LVC) environments. This paper applies concepts of systems engineering, lifecycles, and architectural best practices to provide a road map or blueprint for SISO’s standards landscape.
Type
Working Paper
Description
Documents include Paper & Presentation.
Simulation Interoperability Standards Organization (SISO) SIW Conference Paper
Simulation Interoperability Standards Organization (SISO) SIW Conference Paper
Series/Report No
11F-SIW-001;
Department
Modeling, Virtual Environments, and Simulation Institute (MOVES)
Organization
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
SISO
Funder
Format
Citation
Distribution Statement
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.