BS ISO/IEC 21823-3:2021:2023 Edition
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Internet of Things (IoT). Interoperability for IoT systems – Semantic interoperability
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2023 | 50 |
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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2 | undefined |
4 | CONTENTS |
6 | FOREWORD |
7 | INTRODUCTION Figures Figure 1 – Semantic interoperability facet for IoT |
8 | Figure 2 – Using metadata in semantic interoperability Figure 3 – Meaningfulness of the data, described with metadata |
10 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
11 | 4 Abbreviated terms 5 IoT semantic interoperability process 5.1 Overview Figure 4 – Objective of semantic interoperability standard |
12 | 5.2 IoT semantic interoperability process requirements Tables Table 1 – IoT semantic interoperability process requirements |
13 | 5.3 IoT semantic interoperability models Figure 5 – IoT semantic interoperability process model |
14 | Figure 6 – Semantic information usage model |
15 | 5.4 IoT semantic interoperability guidelines 5.4.1 Guidelines on the capture of semantic meaning Figure 7 – Example of structured knowledge representation |
16 | 5.4.2 Guidelines on the integration of semantic interoperability capability |
17 | 5.4.3 Guidelines on the support of semantic interoperability engineering Figure 8 – Example of semantic information usage for a temperature sensor |
19 | Figure 9 – Example of ontology mapping |
20 | Figure 10 – Example of ontology alignment Figure 11 – Example of ontology merging |
21 | 6 IoT semantic interoperability life cycle 6.1 Life cycle requirements Figure 12 – Example of ontology integration |
22 | Table 2 – Llife cycle requirements |
24 | 6.2 Life cycle model Figure 13 – Example of modular design Figure 14 – Example of interoperability maturity evaluation result |
25 | 6.3 Life cycle implementation guidelines 6.3.1 Guidelines on ontology life cycle 6.3.2 Guidelines on semantic interoperability life cycle Figure 15 – Semantic interoperability life cycle model Figure 16 – Example of ontology life cycle model |
26 | 6.3.3 Guidelines on IoT system life cycle Figure 17 – Example of interoperability specification life cycle |
28 | Annex A (informative)Guidance on how to learn IoT semantic interoperability Table A.1 – Syllabus example on IoT semantic interoperability practice |
29 | Table A.2 – Course content for semantic interoperability practice |
31 | Annex B (informative)Guidance on how to develop IoT semantic interoperability B.1 Developing semantic interoperability capabilities B.2 Building steps |
32 | Table B.1 – Building steps for IoT semantic interoperability |
33 | Annex C (informative)Guidance on how to manage IoT semantic interoperability life cycle C.1 Interoperability specification life cycle that supports ontologies Table C.1 – Example of interoperability specification life cycle |
34 | C.2 IoT system life cycle supporting interoperability Table C.2 – Example of IoT system life cycle |
35 | Annex D (informative)Ontological specification of the IoT Reference Architecture D.1 General D.2 Service, network, IoT device and IoT gateway Figure D.1 – IoT entity |
36 | D.3 IoT-User Figure D.2 – Service, network, IoT device and IoT gateway Figure D.3 – IoT-User |
37 | D.4 Virtual entity, physical entity and IoT device D.5 Domain-based Reference Model (RM) Figure D.4 – Virtual entity, physical entity, and IoT device |
38 | Figure D.5 – Domain-based Reference Model |
39 | Annex E (informative)Related existing ontologies E.1 W3C Semantic Sensor Network ontology E.2 IoT-Lite E.3 Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) ontology |
40 | Figure E.1 – Architecture – concepts Figure E.2 – Communication layering model |
41 | Figure E.3 – oneIoTa |
42 | Figure E.4 – OCF ontology |
43 | E.4 ETSI Smart Applications REFerence ontology Figure E.5 – SAREF and its extensions |
44 | E.5 oneM2M Base Ontology E.6 Sensor Model Language (SensorML) Figure E.6 – Overview of the SAREF ontology |
45 | E.7 IoT-O E.8 IoT ontology unification approach |
47 | Bibliography |