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Envisioning Systems Engineering as a Transdisciplinary Venture
Author(s) -
Sillitto Hillary,
Griego Regina,
Arnold Eileen,
Dori Dov,
Martin James,
McKinney Dorothy,
Godfrey Patrick,
Krob Daniel,
Jackson Scott
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
incose international symposium
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2334-5837
DOI - 10.1002/j.2334-5837.2018.00529.x
Subject(s) - process (computing) , agile software development , space (punctuation) , toolbox , computer science , construct (python library) , class (philosophy) , focus (optics) , management science , engineering ethics , systems engineering , process management , software engineering , engineering , artificial intelligence , programming language , physics , operating system , optics
We envision that Systems Engineering (SE) can be transformed into a truly transdisciplinary discipline – a foundational meta‐discipline that supports and enables collaboration between all the disciplines that should be involved in conceiving, building, using and evolving a system so that it will continue to be successful and fit for purpose as time passes. SE can be applied in different ways depending on the situation and how well current SE process patterns are matched to the problem in hand. We identify four elements of this new transdisciplinary framework: SE Tenets; SE Approach; SE Process; and SE Toolbox. We suggest that the use of SE then needs to be considered in three domains: problem space, solution space, and transformation space that helps us along the development‐delivery‐evolution trajectory. We propose twelve SE tenets and show how they should be applied in these three domains. We perceive that even though all elements of the current SE Process can be justified in terms of the twelve tenets applied to these three domains, the current commonly used, standardized SE Process is not suitable for all situations requiring an SE Approach or an application of the SE Tenets. We claim that the framework presented in this paper can act as a unifying structure that facilitates the evolution of Systems Engineering from the current focus on a “standardized” process model suited to a particular class of problem, to a more agile and capable “transdiscipline” that will provide an enabling construct for more successful collaborations that can better deal with a wider range of complicated, complex and chaotic problem situations.

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