DocumentCode
2749924
Title
Designing domain-specific hums architectures: an automated approach
Author
Mukkamala, Ravi ; Agarwal, Neha ; Kumar, Pramod ; Sundaram, Parthiban
Volume
2
fYear
2003
fDate
12-16 Oct. 2003
Abstract
The health usage and monitoring systems (HUMS) automation system automates the design of HUMS architectures. The automated design process involves selection of solutions from a large space of designs as well as pure synthesis of designs. Hence the whole objective is to efficiently search for or synthesize designs or parts of designs in the database and to integrate them to form the entire system design. The automation system adopts two approaches in order to produce the designs: (a) Bottom-up approach and (b) Top down approach. Both the approaches are endowed with a suite of quantitative and qualitative techniques that enable a) the selection of matching component instances, b) the determination of design parameters, c) the evaluation of candidate designs at component-level and at system-level, d) the performance of cost-benefit analyses, e) the performance of trade-off analyses, etc. In short, the automation system attempts to capitalize on the knowledge developed from years of experience in engineering, system design and operation of the HUMS systems in order to economically produce the most optimal and domain-specific designs.
Keywords
cost-benefit analysis; design engineering; software architecture; automated design process; automation systems; cost-benefit analyses; design parameters; domain-specific architecture; health usage systems; matching component instances; monitoring systems; trade-off analyses;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 2003. DASC '03. The 22nd
Conference_Location
Indianapolis, IN, USA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7844-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.2003.1245943
Filename
5731188
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