학술논문

Infusion of cognitive engineering into systems engineering processes and practices
Document Type
Conference
Source
2005 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics System, Man and Cybernetics Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 2005 IEEE International Conference on. 1:960-965 Vol. 1 2005
Subject
Robotics and Control Systems
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Systems engineering and theory
Humans
Engineering management
Intelligent systems
Marine technology
Oceans
Government
Environmental management
Weapons
Acceleration
Tracking
filtering
estimation
information fusion
resource management
Language
ISSN
1062-922X
Abstract
The infusion of cognitive engineering (CogE) methods and tools into traditional systems engineering processes and practices is becoming an important priority as the systems engineering community begins to tackle system of systems (SoS) problems. As one illustration, the military is interested in creating cognitively-inspired systems (as small as a PDA and as large as a weapon platform) that maximally exploit human potential while also accelerating both human supported and automated decision making. To date, cognitive engineering has been successfully applied to the planning and requirements definition phases of systems engineering (also known as front-end analysis) but has yet to be infused into the remaining phases of systems engineering. To span the full systems engineering lifecycle, it is important, first and foremost, to communicate the return-on-investment to the various stakeholders to get their buy in. The second question that needs to be answered is whether or not "cognitive engineering is ready for primetime". This paper presents promising technical and management strategies to overcome the challenges in introducing cognitive engineering into system-of-systems engineering (SOSE). Specifically, it presents a representative set of cognitive engineering methods and tools to span the full SoS life-cycle as well as cognitive engineering awareness initiatives to penetrate both the DoD acquisition community and commercial industry.