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BS EN 62656-5:2017

$198.66

Standardized product ontology register and transfer by spreadsheets – Interface for activity description

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2017 66
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IEC 62656-5:2017 specifies a method for representing activities and relations among the activities by a tabular ontology representation, called “parcellized activity model” or PAM for short, which is a specialized use of a generic tabular ontology data model, known as the parcellized ontology model (POM) defined in Part 1 of the IEC 62656 series. The activities that can be described by this document include part or whole of an enterprise, an organization or a collection of services, a set of events or processes which interact with each other by exchanging physical or non-physical entities. This part of IEC 62656 also defines a method for uniquely identifying activities, or their homologues happenings in a certain sequence. In addition, this document identifies flows of information, objects or materials exchanged among activities, where each of the activities is represented by a class and each flow by a relation.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 National foreword
5 Annex ZA(normative)Normative references to international publicationswith their corresponding European publications
7 English
CONTENTS
9 FOREWORD
11 1 Scope
12 2 Normative references
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviations
3.1 Terms and definitions
14 3.2 Abbreviations
4 Overview
4.1 Activity described as an ontology
15 4.2 Use cases and key technical concepts
16 Figures
Figure 1 – See fine arts at Museum
17 Figure 2 – Production operations management (extracted from IEC 62264-3)
18 Figure 3 – Production operations management modelled in PAM and depicted as IDEF-0 diagram
19 4.3 Relation among properties of different activities
4.4 International Concept Identifier (ICID)
5 Basic structure of the PAM
5.1 Activity and arrows
20 5.2 Subactivities
5.2.1 General
5.2.2 Specialized activity
5.2.3 Component activity
21 5.3 ICOM representation
5.4 Role of the mechanism (M) in the PAM
Figure 4 – Basic activity and its subcomponents
22 5.5 External function call
5.6 Basic PAM notation with function symbols
23 Figure 5 – Corresponding IDEF0 diagram for basic PAM notation
Tables
Table 1 – Basic PAM notation for arrows
24 Figure 6 – Sample activity drawing in IDEF0 and ICOM
Figure 7 – Subactivities and arrows
25 5.7 Joining arrows
Figure 8 – Joining arrow example
26 5.8 Forking arrows
5.9 Branching or joining of arrows
27 5.10 Transcendental arrows
5.10.1 General
Figure 9 – Forking arrow example
28 Figure 10 – Transcendental arrows to be taken over by child nodes
Figure 11 – Transcendental arrows from the parent node
29 5.10.2 Modelling incoming arrows
5.10.3 Modelling outgoing arrows
30 5.10.4 Modelling connections of arrows at frame boundary
31 5.10.5 Contracted form of representation for branching and joining arrows
Table 2 – Extracts of relation meta-class definitions for activities
32 5.10.6 Domain or codomain overloading for transcendent arrows
33 5.11 Extended semantics beyond IDEF0
5.11.1 Specialized types of activity and its icon
Table 3 – Contracted representation for connectivity of activities
34 Figure 12 – IDEF0 extension for specialized activity node in the PAM
35 5.11.2 Conjunction node
5.11.3 Disjunction node
Figure 13 – An implementation example of Conjunction node in the PAM
36 5.11.4 Complementation node
5.11.5 Selection node
5.11.6 Transformation node
5.11.7 Decision tree
5.12 Graphic properties of arrows
5.13 Arrow specialization
37 5.14 Delegated formula interpretation
Figure 14 – Super relation and its application for specialized activity
38 Table 4 – Reserved keywords for formula interpretation
39 Annex A (normative) Meta-properties for activity description
A.1 General
A.2 List of meta-properties
40 Table A.1 – Meta-properties of relation meta-class used for activity description (1 of 2)
42 Annex B (informative) Description examples for the PAM
B.1 Design product
43 Figure B.1 – Class meta-class example of the PAM for “design product” activity (1 of 2)
45 Figure B.2 – Property meta-class example of the PAM for “design product” activity (1 of 2)
47 Figure B.3 – Relation meta-class example of the PAM for “design product” activity (1 of 6)
53 B.2 Sample IDEF0 Diagram
54 Figure B.4 – IDEF0 diagram image corresponding to A-0 (frame containing A0)
55 Figure B.5 – IDEF0 diagram image corresponding to A0 (frame containing subactivities of A0)
56 Annex C (informative) Example PAM data for production operations management
57 Figure C.1 – Class meta-class example for production operations management defined in IEC 62264-3
58 Figure C.2 – Property meta-class example for production operations management defined in IEC 62264-3
59 Figure C.3 – Relation meta-class example for production operations management defined in IEC 62264-3 (1 of 3)
62 Figure C.4 – Autogenerated IDEF 0 A-0 (top) node for production operations management defined in IEC 62264-3
63 Figure C.5 – Autogenerated IDEF A0 node for production operations management defined in IEC 62264-3
64 Bibliography
BS EN 62656-5:2017
$198.66