Affiliations: Lockheed Martin Corporation Bethesda, MD, USA | Department of Systems Engineering and Operations
Research, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA
Abstract: The environment in many contemporary organizations, including the US
Department of Defense, has changed and evolved such that operations now
requires successful joint integration and interoperability of multiple complex
systems to achieve an integrated operating capability. Many of these complex
systems were not necessarily designed to communicate with one another, and
there are other interesting problems encountered when not properly integrating
them where the goal is to establish an integrated system of systems (SoS)
capability. There has been very little research with respect to the integration
and testing of SoS and, in particular, verification and validation activities
to assure that the systems are successfully integrated to achieve the
integrated capability, mission, and satisfy requirements. This paper describes an approach to SoS integration and testing,
including an evolutionary SoS overarching test process, driven by
capabilities-based testing, for reducing integration risks when engineering a
SoS. The effectiveness of the approach is validated by means of a case study.
This paper describes several contributions: a system requirements approach based on three models, top-down
decomposition, horizontal threads-based analysis, and bottoms-up operational
capability reengineering; a cross-program independent verification, validation, and test
process: and key systems engineering lessons learned and learning principles on
the basis of the case study. The major intent of this effort is to obtain an overarching SoS
integration and test process that will enable risk reduction before the SoS is
operationally deployed.