BS ISO 15638-21:2018
$167.15
Intelligent transport systems. Framework for cooperative telematics applications for regulated commercial freight vehicles (TARV) – Monitoring of regulated vehicles using roadside sensors and data collected from the vehicle for enforcement and other purposes
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2018 | 42 |
The ISO 15638 series of standards defines the framework (3.21) for online fleet management of regulated commercial freight vehicles utilizing data communication between in-vehicle systems and an application service provider (3.39) via on-board communication unit interfacing with road monitoring infrastructure. This document defines an extension to the existing role model conceptual architecture (3.7) by adding roadside sensors (3.37) to the model for additional data collection path for enhancement of the system.
The objective of this document is to reinforce vehicle monitoring for enforcement and other management purposes of regulated commercial freight vehicle movements. The scope of this document is to
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Reinforce vehicle monitoring for enforcement and other purposes,
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Provide additional data security by using roadside sensor data links,
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Detect/avoid tampering/incorrect setting of onboard sensor equipment,
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Provide means of using roadside sensors to validate the accuracy of on-board equipment, and
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Enable the combined use of data obtained from the regulated commercial freight vehicle and roadside/in-road sensors to monitor, manage and control the movement of regulated commercial freight vehicles.
In this extended role model architecture (3.7), roadside sensor (including buried in-road sensors) functionality is added to the existing TARV role model. In this extended role model, jurisdictions (3.28) and other entities can reinforce monitoring or other management purpose applications by using a combination of information from both in-vehicle systems and roadside/in-road sensors.
In this document, the framework (3.21) for this modified and improved reinforcement of vehicle monitoring for enforcement and other management purpose applications is defined.
This document is complementary to, and does not replace, any other parts of the ISO 15638 series of standards. This document is beneficial to jurisdiction enforcement and other vehicle monitoring management purpose entities and it provides a means for using roadside sensors to validate the accuracy of on-board equipment and provides additional use cases for TARV service applications.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | National foreword |
7 | Foreword |
8 | Introduction |
9 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references |
10 | 3 Terms and definitions |
14 | 4 Abbreviated terms |
15 | 5 Conformance 6 General overview and framework |
18 | 7 Requirements for services using generic vehicle data 7.1 General 7.2 Regulated application services using only generic basic vehicle data |
19 | 7.3 Regulated application services using both generic vehicle data and additional regulated application specific data 7.4 Conveyance identifiers 8 Application services that require data in addition to basic vehicle data 8.1 General 8.2 Concept of operations for identified regulated application services with additional data requirements using roadside sensors 8.2.1 General |
20 | 8.2.2 Statement of the goals and objectives of the system 8.2.3 Strategies, tactics, policies, and constraints affecting the system 8.2.4 Organizations, activities, and interactions among participants and stakeholders 8.2.5 Clear statement of responsibilities and authorities delegated 8.2.6 User |
21 | 8.2.7 Application service provider 8.2.8 Application service 8.2.9 Operational processes for the system 8.2.10 Service requirements definition 8.3 Sequence of operations for identified regulated application services with additional data requirements 8.3.1 General sequence of operations |
26 | 8.4 Quality of service requirements |
27 | 8.5 Test requirements 8.6 Marking, labelling and packaging 9 Common features of regulated TARV application services 9.1 Generic operational processes for the system |
29 | 9.2 Common role of the user 9.2.1 Role of the driver 9.2.2 Role of the operator 9.3 Common characteristics for instantiations of regulated application services |
31 | 9.4 Common sequence of operations for regulated application services 9.5 Quality of service 9.6 Information security 9.7 Data naming content and quality |
32 | 9.8 Software engineering quality systems 9.9 Quality monitoring station 9.10 Audits 9.11 Data access control policy 9.12 Approval of IVSs and service provider 9.13 Approval of road side sensors |
33 | Annex A (informative) Application examples |
38 | Annex B (informative) Roadside sensors |
40 | Bibliography |