Title :
Engineering design using decision analysis
Author :
Buede, Dennis M.
Author_Institution :
Center of Excellence in Command, Control, Commun. & Intelligence, George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA, USA
Abstract :
This paper relates the top-down, iterative design process of systems engineering to key elements of decision analysis to show how decision analysis concepts can be used to enhance decision making by systems engineers. We begin by reviewing the systems engineering process: requirements, operational concept, system boundaries, and functional, physical and operational architectures. We then discuss requirements as objectives and constraints. Next, we introduce the decision analysis concepts of fundamental objectives and the fundamental objectives hierarchy. These ideas are related to the traditional concepts of measures of effectiveness (MOEs) and measures of performance (MOPs). We then describe influence diagrams and show how the choice of operational architectures and the associated requirements allocation can be addressed with influence diagrams. We discuss how the fundamental objectives and objectives hierarchy change as the iterative design process proceeds to greater and greater detail
Keywords :
iterative methods; operations research; performance evaluation; systems engineering; decision analysis; effectiveness measure; engineering design; fundamental objectives; influence diagrams; iterative design process; operational architectures; operational concept; performance measure; requirements allocation; system boundaries; systems engineering; Communication system control; Control systems; Decision making; Design engineering; Discrete event simulation; Elevators; Intelligent control; Maintenance engineering; Process design; Systems engineering and theory;
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 1994. Humans, Information and Technology., 1994 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Antonio, TX
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2129-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICSMC.1994.400123