You are required to read and agree to the below before accessing a full-text version of an article in the IDE article repository.
The full-text document you are about to access is subject to national and international copyright laws. In most cases (but not necessarily all) the consequence is that personal use is allowed given that the copyright owner is duly acknowledged and respected. All other use (typically) require an explicit permission (often in writing) by the copyright owner.
For the reports in this repository we specifically note that
- the use of articles under IEEE copyright is governed by the IEEE copyright policy (available at http://www.ieee.org/web/publications/rights/copyrightpolicy.html)
- the use of articles under ACM copyright is governed by the ACM copyright policy (available at http://www.acm.org/pubs/copyright_policy/)
- technical reports and other articles issued by M‰lardalen University is free for personal use. For other use, the explicit consent of the authors is required
- in other cases, please contact the copyright owner for detailed information
By accepting I agree to acknowledge and respect the rights of the copyright owner of the document I am about to access.
If you are in doubt, feel free to contact webmaster@ide.mdh.se
On the Concepts of Capability and Constituent System Independence in Systems-of-Systems
Note:
A recording of the conference presentation is available at https://play.mdh.se/media/t/0_jrvvkw5j.
Publication Type:
Conference/Workshop Paper
Venue:
17th IEEE International Conference on System of Systems Engineering
DOI:
10.1109/SOSE55472.2022.9812682
Abstract
Systems-of-systems are designed to provide a
capability that their constituent systems cannot achieve
individually. A key property is that the constituent systems have
some degree of operational and managerial independence. The
concepts of capability and independence are thus central to the
field of systems-of-systems. Yet the contemporary literature and
standards only give vague definitions of these terms. This
vagueness is a barrier to progress in the field, and this paper
aims at contributing with a more detailed conceptualization. It
describes a system capability as a state-transforming process
that uses certain resources. Independence means that the system
has a choice about when and how its capabilities should be
activated. This requires that the system is an intelligent agent
with a notion of utility, a perception of the world around it, and
a decision-making capability. When given a mission, the system
can complete that mission by activating appropriate
combinations of capabilities. A system-of-systems can
decompose its mission into parts that correspond to the
capabilities of various constituent systems.
Bibtex
@inproceedings{Axelsson6511,
author = {Jakob Axelsson and Pontus Svenson},
title = {On the Concepts of Capability and Constituent System Independence in Systems-of-Systems},
note = {A recording of the conference presentation is available at https://play.mdh.se/media/t/0{\_}jrvvkw5j.},
month = {August},
year = {2022},
booktitle = {17th IEEE International Conference on System of Systems Engineering},
url = {http://www.es.mdu.se/publications/6511-}
}