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    Engineering Complex, Information-Based, Networked Industrial Systems: A Research Roadmap

    Source: Journal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering:;2008:;volume( 008 ):;issue: 001::page 11005
    Author:
    Albert Jones
    ,
    Abhijit Deshmukh
    ,
    Soundar Kumara
    ,
    Man-Sze Li
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2844398
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: The explosive pace of globalization and the rapid development of information and communications technologies continue to impact the evolution of industrial systems. They have become completely dependent on information—generating, exchanging, and processing far more electronic data than ever before. They have become geographically dispersed organizations that comprise numerous, tightly interconnected networks of diverse companies. As a result, current-day industrial systems exhibit highly nonlinear, chaotic, and unpredictable behaviors. How best to engineer these new systems is a question of both theoretical and practical importance. Albert Einstein believed that you cannot use old approaches to solve new, and fundamentally different, problems. (“We cannot solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”) That old approach, Descartes’ reductionism, said that you could infer the behavior of the entire system by knowing only the behavior of its components. This view is not valid for these new systems, because their behavior emerges in complex ways from the interactions of those components. Therefore, in this paper, we argue that a different approach to engineering these new types of industrial systems is needed. We base that approach on our view that these systems are remarkably similar to living systems. In this paper, we describe the major characteristics of living systems, summarize their similarities with these new systems, and use these similarities as a basis for a new research agenda.
    keyword(s): Networks , Topology , Decision making AND Simulation models ,
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      Engineering Complex, Information-Based, Networked Industrial Systems: A Research Roadmap

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    contributor authorAlbert Jones
    contributor authorAbhijit Deshmukh
    contributor authorSoundar Kumara
    contributor authorMan-Sze Li
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:27:19Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:27:19Z
    date copyrightMarch, 2008
    date issued2008
    identifier issn1530-9827
    identifier otherJCISB6-25985#011005_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/137629
    description abstractThe explosive pace of globalization and the rapid development of information and communications technologies continue to impact the evolution of industrial systems. They have become completely dependent on information—generating, exchanging, and processing far more electronic data than ever before. They have become geographically dispersed organizations that comprise numerous, tightly interconnected networks of diverse companies. As a result, current-day industrial systems exhibit highly nonlinear, chaotic, and unpredictable behaviors. How best to engineer these new systems is a question of both theoretical and practical importance. Albert Einstein believed that you cannot use old approaches to solve new, and fundamentally different, problems. (“We cannot solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”) That old approach, Descartes’ reductionism, said that you could infer the behavior of the entire system by knowing only the behavior of its components. This view is not valid for these new systems, because their behavior emerges in complex ways from the interactions of those components. Therefore, in this paper, we argue that a different approach to engineering these new types of industrial systems is needed. We base that approach on our view that these systems are remarkably similar to living systems. In this paper, we describe the major characteristics of living systems, summarize their similarities with these new systems, and use these similarities as a basis for a new research agenda.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleEngineering Complex, Information-Based, Networked Industrial Systems: A Research Roadmap
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume8
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2844398
    journal fristpage11005
    identifier eissn1530-9827
    keywordsNetworks
    keywordsTopology
    keywordsDecision making AND Simulation models
    treeJournal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering:;2008:;volume( 008 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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