A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts

The concept of a mission is important to system design and development, especially in system of systems (SoS) engineering. However, the diverse usage of the term ’mission’ across disciplines often results in ambiguity regarding its role in practical applications in mission-centric engineering tasks....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zelalem Mihret Belay, Jakob Axelsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-12-01
Series:Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-8954/12/12/567
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846102553140396032
author Zelalem Mihret Belay
Jakob Axelsson
author_facet Zelalem Mihret Belay
Jakob Axelsson
author_sort Zelalem Mihret Belay
collection DOAJ
description The concept of a mission is important to system design and development, especially in system of systems (SoS) engineering. However, the diverse usage of the term ’mission’ across disciplines often results in ambiguity regarding its role in practical applications in mission-centric engineering tasks. Clearly defined and precisely represented missions improve communication among stakeholders and help bridge interdisciplinary gaps. This study aims to investigate and analyze the state of the art for mission conceptualizations and representations and proposes a unified mission ontology (UMO) that improves semantic interoperability across various domains. To achieve this goal, we conducted a systematic literature review (SLR) to examine how missions are conceptualized and represented, analyzed the findings to obtain insight about cross-domain concepts related to missions, and developed a UMO that can be adapted to domain specific applications. The UMO facilitates semantic interoperability across domains through a high-level abstraction of shared concepts. To validate the comprehensiveness and adaptability of the UMO, we conducted coverage analysis using semantic similarity estimates to assess the equivalence of ontological concepts. This evaluation quantified the extent to which concepts from various domain-specific ontologies, including the mission engineering guideline, align with those in the UMO.
format Article
id doaj-art-2f8db886b2d74e9a80d19c287b9b7820
institution Kabale University
issn 2079-8954
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Systems
spelling doaj-art-2f8db886b2d74e9a80d19c287b9b78202024-12-27T14:55:48ZengMDPI AGSystems2079-89542024-12-01121256710.3390/systems12120567A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary ConceptsZelalem Mihret Belay0Jakob Axelsson1Computer Science and Software Engineering, Mälardalen University, 721 23 Västerås, SwedenComputer Science and Software Engineering, Mälardalen University, 721 23 Västerås, SwedenThe concept of a mission is important to system design and development, especially in system of systems (SoS) engineering. However, the diverse usage of the term ’mission’ across disciplines often results in ambiguity regarding its role in practical applications in mission-centric engineering tasks. Clearly defined and precisely represented missions improve communication among stakeholders and help bridge interdisciplinary gaps. This study aims to investigate and analyze the state of the art for mission conceptualizations and representations and proposes a unified mission ontology (UMO) that improves semantic interoperability across various domains. To achieve this goal, we conducted a systematic literature review (SLR) to examine how missions are conceptualized and represented, analyzed the findings to obtain insight about cross-domain concepts related to missions, and developed a UMO that can be adapted to domain specific applications. The UMO facilitates semantic interoperability across domains through a high-level abstraction of shared concepts. To validate the comprehensiveness and adaptability of the UMO, we conducted coverage analysis using semantic similarity estimates to assess the equivalence of ontological concepts. This evaluation quantified the extent to which concepts from various domain-specific ontologies, including the mission engineering guideline, align with those in the UMO.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-8954/12/12/567system of systemsmission ontologyunified mission ontologymission engineering
spellingShingle Zelalem Mihret Belay
Jakob Axelsson
A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
Systems
system of systems
mission ontology
unified mission ontology
mission engineering
title A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
title_full A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
title_fullStr A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
title_full_unstemmed A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
title_short A Unified Mission Ontology Based on Systematic Integration of Interdisciplinary Concepts
title_sort unified mission ontology based on systematic integration of interdisciplinary concepts
topic system of systems
mission ontology
unified mission ontology
mission engineering
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-8954/12/12/567
work_keys_str_mv AT zelalemmihretbelay aunifiedmissionontologybasedonsystematicintegrationofinterdisciplinaryconcepts
AT jakobaxelsson aunifiedmissionontologybasedonsystematicintegrationofinterdisciplinaryconcepts
AT zelalemmihretbelay unifiedmissionontologybasedonsystematicintegrationofinterdisciplinaryconcepts
AT jakobaxelsson unifiedmissionontologybasedonsystematicintegrationofinterdisciplinaryconcepts