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 |
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 |
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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 |