20 October 2009

Modeling paradigms for modeling the Ontological elements of a PMESII environment

In appendix C of Behavioral Modeling and Simulation: From Individuals to Societies there is a decent overview of some modeling techniques to capture PMESII factors.

These approaches/techniques include:
Concept Maps
Concept Graphs
Social Networks
Casual Graphs
Systems Dynamics Model
Neural Networks
Situation Theory

The link above gives a nice reference to particular appendix, or the book is available for browsing here:












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15 October 2009

More on Topology

A few more decent references on topology representing a couple of decades worth of text books on the subject (1961, 1970, 1980).

First this is from 1961 -


Here is one from 1970 -


And finally, from 1980 -


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System Topology

I rely on System Topology in the same that a network engineer for an information network would refer to a Network Topology. Only I am referring to the interconnected processes, and their relations amongst each other (as captured in the IDEF series of diagrams, or more recently, by Sowa's claim that a system is much more appropriately looked at as an interconnected graph of processes, rather than a group of data/object states, that only use process as a connective tissue).

A nice little definition (from Wolfram Mathworld) -
Topology is the mathematical study of the properties that are preserved through deformations, twistings, and stretchings of objects. Tearing, however, is not allowed. A circle is topologically equivalent to an ellipse (into which it can be deformed by stretching) and a sphere is equivalent to an ellipsoid. Similarly, the set of all possible positions of the hour hand of a clock is topologically equivalent to a circle (i.e., a one-dimensional closed curve with no intersections that can be embedded in two-dimensional space), the set of all possible positions of the hour and minute hands taken together is topologically equivalent to the surface of a torus (i.e., a two-dimensional a surface that can be embedded in three-dimensional space), and the set of all possible positions of the hour, minute, and second hands taken together are topologically equivalent to a three-dimensional object.


My intention is to use the term system topology to refer to the overall graph of interconnected processes within a system, which I submit is potentially dynamic and can be potentially changed as much as the value or nature of objects affected by those processes.

A decent book (compliments of Google Books, once again) introducing the mathematics of topology . . .




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