Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Automation Tools Supporting the Development of Information Standards for Complex Systems

Published

Author(s)

Eric D. Simmon, Arthur Griesser, Samuel Dana

Abstract

As information systems continue to become more complex, the data standards to support them grow in complexity as well. To meet the needs of today’s systems, not only must the standards change, but the standards development process must change as well. Most standards development organizations still manually develop their standards. The rising complexity of information standards may soon render this approach infeasible. In the future manually developed standards will likely not meet the needs of the users. Additional reasons for automation are reducing opportunities for human error, and speeding up the consensus building process. The higher level artifacts that structure information standards depend on the type of standard. Standards that specify basic information structures are well suited to generation of documents from UML class diagrams: we describe a freely available tool for doing so. Standards that describe particular uses for those information structures are better off starting from use cases. We describe a freely available web-based tool for creating modular use cases supporting the re-use of actors and scenarios, and how compliance and interoperability tests could be generated from these use cases with little extra effort. By focusing on the modeling of data exchange standards and automating the process of creating the standards document directly from the model, errors can be reduced, the standards development time can be decreased and the revision process is simplified. In this paper we describe how standards could be built directly from analysis artifacts.
Proceedings Title
Proceedings of the 18th ISPE International Conference on Concurrent Engineering
Conference Dates
July 4-8, 2011
Conference Location
Boston, MA
Conference Title
Concurrent Engineering 2011

Keywords

Use cases, system design, complex systems, standards development

Citation

Simmon, E. , Griesser, A. and Dana, S. (2011), Automation Tools Supporting the Development of Information Standards for Complex Systems, Proceedings of the 18th ISPE International Conference on Concurrent Engineering, Boston, MA (Accessed April 16, 2024)
Created July 5, 2011, Updated February 19, 2017