Difference between revisions of "Acknowledgements and Release History"

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The Guide to the Systems Engineering Body of Knowledge (SEBoK) has been an immense undertaking involving the collective efforts of so many, including 70 authors, hundreds of reviewers, and the wiki support team. A special thanks goes to our primary sponsor, the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Systems Engineering, who has provided unwavering support over the past three years.
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[[File:2019-05-29 16-46-15.mp4|thumb|Video Created by Rob Cloutier. (2019 SEBoK Editor in Chief, SEBoK Original)]]
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This article describes the contributors to the current version of the SEBoK. For information on contributors to past versions of the SEBoK, please follow the links under "[[Acknowledgements and Release History#SEBoK Release History|SEBoK Release History]]" below.  
  
With gratitude,
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The BKCASE Project began in the fall of 2009. Its aim was to add to the professional practice of systems engineering by creating two closely related products:
 +
*''Guide to the Systems Engineering Body of Knowledge (SEBoK)''
 +
*''Graduate Reference Curriculum for Systems Engineering (GRCSE)'' 
  
[[File:Sigblock.png|300px]]
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==BKCASE History, Motivation, and Value==
  
 +
The '''Guide to the Systems Engineering Body of Knowledge (SEBoK)''' is a living authoritative guide that discusses knowledge relevant to Systems Engineering.  It defines how that knowledge should be structured to facilitate understanding, and what reference sources are the most important to the discipline. The curriculum guidance in the '''Graduate Reference Curriculum for Systems Engineering (GRCSE)''' (Pyster and Olwell et al. 2015) makes reference to sections of the SEBoK to define its core knowledge; it also suggests broader program outcomes and objectives which reflect aspects of the professional practice of systems engineering as discussed across the SEBoK.
  
==BKCASE==
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Between 2009 and 2012, BKCASE was led by Stevens Institute of Technology and the Naval Postgraduate School in coordination with several professional societies and sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), which provided generous funding. More than 75 authors and many other reviewers and supporters from dozens of companies, universities, and professional societies across 10 countries contributed many thousands of hours writing the SEBoK articles; their organizations provided significant other contributions in-kind.  
The SEBoK was developed by the Body of Knowledge and Curriculum to Advance Systems Engineering Project (BKCASE) (http://www.bkcase.org), which is concurrently producing the Graduate Reference Curriculum for Systems Engineering (GRCSE). Nearly everyone involved in BKCASE has contributed to both products.  Hence, the acknowledgements generally do not distinguish between contributions to SEBoK and GRCSE.
 
  
==Sponsor==
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The SEBoK came into being through recognition that the systems engineering discipline could benefit greatly by having a living authoritative guide closely related to those groups developing guidance on advancing the practice, education, research, work force development, professional certification, standards, etc.
  
The Department of Defense recognizes the importance of SEBoK to its own workforce development and has provided substantial financial support and partnership to the project. The office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Systems Engineering (DASD/SE) is the primary Department of Defense sponsor for the BKCASE Project. DASD/SE has graciously provided much of the funding for SEBoK development through their Systems Engineering Research Center (SERC) (see http://www.sercuarc.org). Those funds have primarily paid for the time spent by the SEBoK leadership, enabled the many volunteer authors to conduct quarterly physical workshops, and provided for the technical and administrative infrastructure to conduct such a complex distributed project. DASD/SE has not determined the content of the SEBoK, but instead allows the author team and the community to determine what the SEBoK should contain.  Without this support, this project would not be possible. Special thanks go to Stephen Welby, Kristen Baldwin, Nicholas Torelli, Don Gelosh, and Scott Lucero.
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At the beginning of 2013, BKCASE transitioned to a new governance model with shared stewardship between the [http://www.sercuarc.org Systems Engineering Research Center (SERC)], the [http://www.incose.org International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE)], and the [http://www.computer.org Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Computer Society (IEEE-CS)]. This governance structure was formalized in a memorandum of understanding between the three stewards that was finalized in spring of 2013 and subsequently updated. In January 2020, the [https://ieeesystemscouncil.org/ IEEE Systems Council] replaced the IEEE-CS in representing IEEE as a steward. The stewards have reconfirmed their commitment to making the SEBoK available at no cost to all users, a key principle of BKCASE.
  
The remaining two thirds of the project cost were donations in-kind by our partners to support the labor and travel of the authors.  We gratefully acknowledge their contributions.
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As of May 2022, SEBoK articles have had over 6M pageviews from more than 2M unique visitors. We hope the SEBoK will regularly be used by thousands of systems engineers and others around the world as they undertake technical activities such as eliciting requirements, creating systems architectures, or analyzing system test results; and professional development activities such as developing career paths for systems engineers, and deciding new curricula for systems engineering university programs.
  
''This material is based upon work supported, in whole or in part, by the U.S. Department of Defense through the Systems Engineering Research Center (SERC) under Contract H98230-08-D-0171. SERC is a federally funded University Affiliated Research Center managed by Stevens Institute of Technology.  Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Department of Defense.''
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==Governance==
 +
The SEBoK is shaped by the SEBoK Editorial Board and is overseen by the BKCASE Governing Board. A complete list of members for each of these bodies can be found on the [[BKCASE Governance and Editorial Board]] page.
  
==Part Team Leads==
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== Content and Feature Updates for version 2.9==
The SEBoK is divided into seven primary ''Parts'' (see [[SEBoK Table of Contents]]). For each of the Parts, someone graciously volunteered to lead a team of authors in writing the articles and coordinating article integration. This was an enormous amount of work. We would like to thank each of these individuals for their time, dedication, and leadership.  In addition, a member of the core team supported each of the part team leads.
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This version was released on 20 November 2023.  This release included:
 +
*[[Governance and Editorial Boards]] changes including a new Editor-in-Chief and Managing Editor
 +
*A new article on [[Reverse Engineering a UAV Prototype using Agile Practices]]
 +
*A new article on [[System Security]] that replaces the one found in SEBoK 2.8
 +
*A new article on the [[An Overview of the SWEBOK Guide]] that replaces the one found in SEBoK 2.8
 +
*An updated article on Loss Driven Systems Engineering, [[A Framework for Viewing Quality Attributes from the Lens of Loss]]
 +
*An updated article on [[System Resilience]]
 +
*A transition from the use cases originally published in SEBoK v. 1.0 to more persona-driven guidance for different types of [[SEBoK Users and Uses|users]]
 +
*Minor updates to articles throughout the SEBoK
  
* Part 1 - Barry Boehm with support from Art Pyster
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==SEBoK Release History==
* Part 2 - Richard Adcock with support from Nicole Hutchison
+
There have been 21 releases of the SEBoK to date.
* Part 3 - Garry Roedler with support from Jim Anthony
 
* Part 4 - Harold (Bud) Lawson with support from David Olwell
 
* Part 5 - Art Pyster with support from Alice Squires and Devanandham Henry
 
* Part 6 - David Olwell with support from Art Pyster
 
* Part 7 - Heidi Davidz with support from Alice Squires and Devanandham Henry
 
  
==Authors==
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=== Main Releases ===
As a primarily volunteer effort, BKCASE has depended on dozens of authors from around the world to provide their own time and expenses. Each of the individuals listed below has worked many hours to develop and improve SEBoK and GRCSE. Without each of them, it would have been impossible to succeed.  Many of them have been supported by their organizations during this effort, including support for travel and labor, and we also gratefully acknowledge the organizational contribution.
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.9|Version 2.9]] - current version.
 +
* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.8|Version 2.8]] - this release included new articles on systems engineering and enterprise IT, and system adaptability; minor updates to several articles throughout the wiki; imrpovements to the wiki infrastructure; and Rob Cloutier's final edition of the SEBoK as Editor-in-Chief.
 +
* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.7|Version 2.7]] - this release included new articles on loss-driven systems engineering and the history of systems engineering; updates to the article on systems and industrial engineering; and minor updates to improve resources and align with evolving practices throughout part 3, including in the articles around systems engineering standards and to the articles in Part 5, particularly the addition of new resources. There were also some improvements in the SEBoK wiki infrastructure.
  
<center>
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.6|Version 2.6]] - this update included substantial evolution of Parts 2 and 3, the foundations of systems engineering and systems engineering approaches, methods, processes, and tools. The version also included more information on Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) and Digital Engineering, refinement of systems science foundations of systems engineering, and a new article on agile approaches. In Part 6 there were many new articles and updates to existing articles on the relationships between systems engineering and other disciplines.
{|
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.5|Version 2.5]] - This version included an update of the main page; creation of the [[Editor's Corner]]; new sponsors and sponsorship packages; new navigation in the left-hand menu; small edits to address the comments received from the community. This release also updated to the latest version of MediaWiki, tightened up the IT infrastructure, and made some adjustments to improve performance.
|+ '''Table 1. BKCASE Authors.''' (SEBoK Original)
+
* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.4|Version 2.4]] - This was a minor release, including reorganizations of Part 6 and 8 to handle new knowledge areas and topics. In addition, several new articles were added, including, Systems Engineering Heuristics, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Systems Engineering and Geospatial/Geodetic Engineering Knowledge Area, System Hardware Assurance, Socio-technical Systems, Verification and Validation of Systems in Which AI is a Key Element, and an introductory article on Artificial Intelligence. The content on Systems of Systems (SoS) was also updated.
|-
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.3|Version 2.3]] - This was a minor release, including two new articles: [[Cycles and the Cyclic Nature of Systems]] and [[Portfolio Management]]. A number of additional minor edits, including a new overview graphic for the SEBoK, cleanup of existing pages, software updates, etc. were incorporated.
!Author
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.2|Version 2.2]] - This was a significant release, including the first new Part to be added since v. 1.0 - Emerging Knowledge - which is a place to highlight new topics in systems engineering that are important but may not yet have a large body of literature. Recent dissertations around emerging topics are also included. A new case study on Apollo 1 was added to Part 7, which has also been reorganized around topics. Additional minor updates have occurred throughout.
!Author
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.1|Version 2.1]] - This was a significant release with new articles, new functionality, and minor updates throughout.
|-
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 2.0|Version 2.0]] - This was a major release of the SEBoK which included incorporation of multi-media and a number of changes to the functions of the SEBoK.
|Richard Adcock, Cranfield University and International Council on Systems Engineering in the UK
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.9.1|Version 1.9.1]] - This was a micro release of the SEBoK which included updates to the editorial board, and a number of updates to the wiki software.
|Duane Hyberston, The MITRE Corporation in the US
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.9|Version 1.9]] - This was a minor update which included updates to the [[System Resilience]] article in [[Related_Disciplines|Part 6: Related Disciplines]], as well as a major restructuring of [[Systems_Engineering_Implementation_Examples|Part 7: Systems Engineering Implementation Examples]]. A new example has been added around the use of model based systems engineering for the thirty-meter telescope.
|-
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.8|Version 1.8]] - This was a minor update, including an update of the [[Systems of Systems (SoS)]] knowledge area in [[Applications of Systems Engineering|Part 4: Applications of Systems Engineering]] where a number of articles were updated on the basis of developments in the area as well as on comments from the SoS and SE community. [[Related Disciplines|Part 6: Related Disciplines]] included updates to the [[Manufacturability and Producibility]] and [[System Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability|Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability]] articles.
|James F. Anthony, Jr., Sevatec, Inc. in the US
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.7|Version 1.7]] - This was a minor update, including a new [[Healthcare Systems Engineering|Healthcare SE Knowledge Area (KA)]], expansion of the MBSE area with two new articles, [[Technical Leadership in Systems Engineering|Technical Leadership]] and [[System Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability|Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability]] and a new case study on the [[Northwest Hydro System]].  
|Scott Jackson, University of Southern California in the US
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.6|Version 1.6]] - This was a minor update, including a reorganization of [[SEBoK Introduction|Part 1 SEBoK Introduction]], a new article on the [[Transitioning Systems Engineering to a Model-based Discipline|Transition towards Model Based Systems Engineering]] and a new article giving an overview of [[Healthcare Systems Engineering]], a restructure of the "Systems Engineering and Specialty Engineering" (now [[Systems Engineering and Quality Attributes]]) KA.
|-
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.5|Version 1.5]] - This was a minor update, including a restructure and extension of the Software Engineering Knowledge Area, two new case studies, and a number of corrections of typographical errors and updates of outdated references throughout the SEBoK.
|Erik Aslaksen, Sinclair Knight Merz in Australia,
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* [[Development of SEBoK v. 1.4|Version 1.4]] - This was a minor update, including changes related to ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2015 standard, three new case studies and updates to a number of articles.
|Mo Jamshidi, University of Texas San Antonio in the US
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*[[Development of SEBoK v. 1.3|Version 1.3]] - This was a minor update, including three new case studies, a new use case, updates to several existing articles, and updates to references.
|-
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*[[Development of SEBoK v. 1.2|Version 1.2]] - This was a minor update, including two new articles and a revision of several existing articles.
|Richard Beasley, Rolls Royce in the UK
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*[[Development of SEBoK v. 1.1|Version 1.1]] - This was a minor update that made modest content improvements.
|Cheryl Jones, United States Army
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*[[Development of SEBoK v. 1.0|Version 1.0]] - This was the first official version of the SEBoK intended for broad use and was released 15 September 2012.
|-
 
|Barry Boehm, University of Southern California in the US
 
|Chul Whan Kim, Advisor of KCOSE in Korea
 
|-
 
|Stuart Booth, Office of the Secretary of Defense in the US
 
|Naohiko Kohtake, KEIO University in Japan
 
|-
 
|John Brackett, Boston University in the US
 
|Harold (Bud) Lawson, Lawson Konsult AB in Sweden
 
|-
 
|Chuck Calvano, Naval Postgraduate School in the US
 
|Yeaw lip “Alex” Lee, Defence Science and Technology Agency in Singapore
 
|-
 
|Aaron Eng Seng Chia, National University of Singapore in Singapore
 
|Ray Madachy, Naval Postgraduate School in the US
 
|-
 
|Kyung-il Choe, HUFS in Korea
 
|James Martin, The Aerospace Corporation in the US
 
|-
 
|Edmund Conrow, Management and Technology Associates in the US
 
|Gregory Mayhew, Boeing in the US
 
|-
 
|Paul Croll, CSC in the US
 
|Steven Mitchell, Lockheed Martin in the US
 
|-
 
|Cihan Dagli, Missouri University of Science and Technology in the US
 
|Ken Nidiffer, Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute and Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers Systems Council both in the US
 
|-
 
|Judith Dahmann, MITRE in the US
 
|David H. Olwell, Naval Postgraduate School in the US
 
|-
 
|Heidi Davidz, Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne in the US
 
|Bo Oppenheim, Loyola Marymount University in the US
 
|-
 
|Leopoldo Decardenas, Raytheon in the US
 
|Andy Pickard, Rolls-Royce in the US
 
|-
 
|Johann (Hans) Demmel, Raytheon in the US
 
|Ricardo Pineda, University Texas at El Paso in the US
 
|-
 
|Jeremy Dick, Integrate Systems Engineering ltd. in the US
 
|Daniel Prun, Ecole Nationale de l'Aviation Civile (ENAC) -French Civil Aviation University in France
 
|-
 
|Charles Dickerson, Loughborough University in the UK
 
|Art Pyster, Stevens Institute of Technology in the US
 
|-
 
|David Dorgan, Raytheon in the US
 
|Garry Roedler, Lockheed Martin in the US
 
|-
 
|Dov Dori, Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US
 
|Jean-Claude Roussel, European Aeronautical Defence and Space Company in France
 
|-
 
|Joseph J. Ekstrom, Brigham Young University in the US
 
|Janet Singer, University of California Santa Cruz in the US
 
|-
 
|Stephanie Enck, Naval Postgraduate School in the US
 
|Seiko Shirasaka, KEIO University in Japan
 
|-
 
|Marcia Enos, Lockheed Martin in the US
 
|Hillary Sillitto, Thales Group and the International Council on Systems Engineering in the UK
 
|-
 
|Dick Fairley, Observer and Author from Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IEEE) in the US
 
|John Snoderly, Defense Acquisition University in the US
 
|-
 
|Alain Faisandier, Association Francaise d 'Ingenlerie Systeme in France
 
|Alice Squires, Stevens Institute of Technology in the US
 
|-
 
|Tim Ferris, University of South Australia and the International Council on Systems Engineering in Australia
 
|Bill Stiffler, Raytheon in the US
 
|-
 
|Kevin Forsberg, OGR Systems in the US
 
|Massood Towhidnejad, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in the US
 
|-
 
|G. Richard Freeman, Air Force Institute of Technology in the US
 
|Guilherme Horta Travassos, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) in Brazil
 
|-
 
|Sanford Friedenthal, SAF Consulting in the US
 
|Ricardo Valerdi, University of Arizona in the US
 
|-
 
|Brian Gallagher, CACI in the US
 
|Mary VanLeer, Perceptive Systems, Inc. in the US
 
|-
 
|Devanandham Henry, Stevens Institute of Technology in the US
 
|Qing Wang, Institute of Software Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, China
 
|-
 
|Michael Henshaw, Loughborough University in the UK
 
|Brian Wells, Raytheon in the US
 
|-
 
|Thomas Hilburn, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers Computer Society  both in the US
 
|Brian White, CAU<SES in the US
 
|-
 
|Nicole A.C. Hutchison, Stevens Institute of Technology in the US
 
|Ken Zemrowski, TASC, Inc. in the US
 
|}
 
  
</center>
+
Click on the links above to read more information about each release.
  
==Partners==
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----
Partner organizations have supported SEBoK by providing personnel, opportunities to discuss the SEBoK in open forums such as conferences and workshops, and providing valued feedback on draft SEBoK materials.  Some organizations have also chosen to have an official representative(s) participate in BKCASE, as shown below. A special thanks to our partners.
 
  
* [http://www.incose.org The International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE)].  Official INCOSE representatives: Bill Miller and Kevin Forsberg.
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<center>'''SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023'''</center>
* [http://www.computer.org/portal/web/guest/home The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Computer Society].  Official IEEE CS representatives are Dick Fairley, Tom Hilburn and Ken Nidiffer.
 
* [http://www.ieeesystemscouncil.org/ The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Systems Council].  The official IEEE Systems Council representative is Ken Nidiffer.
 
* [http://iienet.org The Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE).]  The official IIE representative is Johann "Hans" Demmel.
 
* [http://www.acm.org The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)].  The official ACM Representative is Andrew McGettrick.
 
* [http://www.ndia.org/Divisions/Divisions/SystemsEngineering/Pages/default.aspx The National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA) Systems Engineering Division].  The official NDIA Systems Engineering Division representative is Garry Roedler.
 
* [http://www.sercuarc.org The Systems Engineering Research Center (SERC)]. The official Systems Engineering Research Center representative is Art Pyster.
 
 
 
For more information on potential partner involvement after publication of version 1.0, please see [[SEBoK Evolution]].
 
 
 
==Wiki Team==
 
The transition from a traditional document to a wiki-based platform was a long one.  We are tremendously grateful to the folks who have helped us install, manage, and update the wiki:
 
*Nicole Hutchison (team lead), ''Stevens Institute of Technology''
 
*Stephanie Enck (co-lead), ''Naval Postgraduate School''
 
*Hans-Peter de Koning, ''European Space Agency''
 
*Paola Di Maio, ''University of Strathclyde''
 
*Ray Jorgensen, ''Rockwell Collins''
 
*Sanford Friedenthal, ''SAF Consulting''
 
*Steven Mitchell, ''Lockheed Martin''
 
 
 
Support for the wiki is provided by Peder Halseide of WikiExpert.
 
 
 
==Participants==
 
The following individuals have provided support to the BKCASE team over the course of the project.
 
 
 
*Johann Amsenga
 
*John Baras
 
*Johan Bendz
 
*Stuart Booth
 
*Dan Cernoch
 
*Richard Frost
 
*Edward Ghafari
 
*Mike Gourley
 
*Richard Gryzbowski
 
*Peter Jackson
 
*Kenneth Kepchar
 
*Mike Kreuger
 
*JoAnn Lane
 
*Richard Rosenthal
 
*Sven-Olaf Schulze
 
*Robert (Bob) Shishko
 
*Mary Jane Willshire
 
 
 
==Reviewers==
 
Reviewers are critical to the success and growth of the SEBoK. By providing feedback that represents the diversity of views and opinions on systems engineering, reviewers help the author team identify and describe ground truths for SE as well as areas of contention. The reviewers who provided feedback for earlier versions (0.25, 0.50, and 0.75) are listed in Table 2, below.  In addition, there are a number of ''other'' reviewers who provided their comments directly on the wiki with only a ''userid'' (and not a full name) and reviewers who were part of a group that provided a collective review, whose names are not listed in Table 2 below. Many thanks to all reviewers!
 
 
 
The author team would like to particularly acknowledge the efforts of several INCOSE working groups (WGs); the following groups provided extensive feedback on SEBoK 0.5 and input for SEBoK 0.75:
 
* Systems Science WG
 
* Architecture WG
 
* Requirements WG
 
* Decision Analysis WG
 
* In Service WG
 
* Lean Systems Engineering WG
 
* System of Systems WG
 
* Process Improvement WG
 
 
 
The adjudication of all SEBoK review comments can be found at [[SEBoK Review and Adjudication]].
 
 
 
<center>
 
{|
 
|+'''Table 2. Reviewers of earlier SEBoK versions.''' (SEBoK Original)
 
|-
 
!Reviewer
 
!Reviewer
 
|-
 
|Aase Jakobsson
 
|Ada Hunter, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Adeel Khalid, Southern Polytechnic State University
 
|Alan D Harding, BAE Systems
 
|-
 
|Alan Knott, Parsons Brinckerhoff
 
|Alan Knott, Parsons Brinckerhoff
 
|-
 
|Alan Knott, Parsons Brinckerhoff
 
|Alandharding, 
 
|-
 
|Ali Bahraman , Raytheon
 
|Ali Bahraman, Raytheon
 
|-
 
|Andrew Farncombe, John Boardman Associates
 
|Andrew McGettrick, The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
 
|-
 
|Anne Sigogne, THALES
 
|Annette Reilly, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Arnold Neville Pears, Uppsala University
 
|Barry Boehm, USC
 
|-
 
|Bart Terrery, Lockheed Martin
 
|Berger, Northrop Grumman
 
|-
 
|Bernadette Gasmi, EADS AIRBUS
 
|Beth Wilson, Raytheon
 
|-
 
|Beth Wilson, Raytheon
 
|Bud Lawson
 
|-
 
|Bo Oppenheim, 
 
|Bob Epps and a Lockheed Martin consolidated review, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Bobinis, Lockheed Martin
 
|Bruce Elliott, 
 
|-
 
|Bruce Elliott, Arbutus Technical Consulting
 
|Bruce Munro, Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems
 
|-
 
|Bruce Munro, 
 
|Bryan E. Herdlick, Applied Physics Laboratory; Johns Hopkins University
 
|-
 
|Chia Eng Seng Aaron, National University of Singapore
 
|Curt Zielinkski, LMC EBS Tech Ops
 
|-
 
|Curt Zielinski, Lockheed Martin
 
|Dahai Liu, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
 
|-
 
|Dan Dillery
 
|Daniel J Dechant, Raytheon
 
|-
 
|Daniel Mulvihill, Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
 
|David D. Walden, INCOSE & Sysnovation LLC
 
|-
 
|David D. Walden, Sysnovation, LLC
 
|David D. Walden, Sysnovation, LLC
 
|-
 
|David Kraus, Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems
 
|David Mason , Lockheed Martin USA
 
|-
 
|David Quastel
 
|David Yarbrough, NGC
 
|-
 
|Dawn Sabados, UA Huntsville
 
|Denis Bertrand & others from the Department of National Defence, Department of National Defence
 
|-
 
|Dennis Moen, Lockheed Martin
 
|Donald Larson, 
 
|-
 
|Donald Robertson, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|Dr. Jon Holt, Atego
 
|-
 
|Dr. Karen J Richter, Institute for Defense Analyses
 
|Dr. Stan Rifkin, Air Force Office of Scientific Research
 
|-
 
|Duane Hybertson, MITRE
 
|Duncan Kemp, Department for Transport
 
|-
 
|Edmond TONNELLIER, Thales
 
|Emile Anderson, Raytheon IDS
 
|-
 
|Francis M. Joyner, Raytheon
 
|Frédéric Autran, EADS - Cassidian Systems
 
|-
 
|Gauthier Fanmuy, AND
 
|George Rebovich, MITRE
 
|-
 
|Gerald H. Fisher
 
|Gerard Auvray, Astrium Satellite
 
|-
 
|Gilles Meuriot, AREVA TA
 
|Gormanfindley, Raytheon
 
|-
 
|Greg Brown, Lockheed Martin
 
|Hagar, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Hans van Vliet, VU University, Amsterdam
 
|Harold Baker
 
|-
 
|Harold Mooz, HMA
 
|Howard Eisner, The George Washington University
 
|-
 
|Hubert Ernest Cody, Raytheon
 
|IEEE Computer Society (collective review)
 
|-
 
|Ivan Mactaggart, AWE PLC
 
|Jack Ring, Educe LLC
 
|-
 
|Jaluane Brooks, Aurora Sciences
 
|James J. Peter, Johns Hopkins University
 
|-
 
|James Jamison, IBM
 
|James Lentz, Northrop Grumman
 
|-
 
|James Martin, The Aerospace Corporation
 
|James van Gaasbeek, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems
 
|-
 
|Jay Mandelbaum, Institute for Defense Analyses
 
|Jean-luc Garnier
 
|-
 
|Jean-Luc Wippler, LUCA Ingénierie
 
|Jeff Lankford, The Aerospace Corporation
 
|-
 
|Jennifer Milligan, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|Jeremy I. Stuart, The Boeing Company
 
|-
 
|JG Demmel, Raytheon
 
|Jim Smith, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Joan E. Nolan, Northrop Grumman Corporation
 
|JoAnn Lane
 
|-
 
|John Clark, INCOSE Technical Operations Process WG
 
|John Clark, Northrop Grumman Corporation
 
|-
 
|John Harauz, Jonic Systems Engineering
 
|John R Tubb
 
|-
 
|Johnny Duckworth, Space & Airborne Systems/Systems Development Center
 
|Jose L. Fernandez Sanchez
 
|-
 
|Jose Luis Fernandez Sanchez, Madrid Technical University (UPM)
 
|Judith Dahmann, MITRE
 
|-
 
|Julie DeMeester, Raytheon
 
|Julie P. Gann, Northrop Grumman Information Systems
 
|-
 
|Kal Toth, Portland State University
 
|Karen Charron, Raytheon
 
|-
 
|Karl Best, Project Management Institute
 
|Ken Ellis, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems
 
|-
 
|Kenneth Morris, 
 
|Kevin Forsberg
 
|-
 
|Krister Sutinen, Siemens Industry Software AB
 
|Lajuane Brooks, Aurora Sciences
 
|-
 
|Larri Rosser, Raytheon IIS
 
|Laurie Nasta, Booz Allen Hamilton
 
|-
 
|Lori Zipes, NAVSEA NSWC Panama City Division (US Dept of Navy)
 
|Lou Oddo, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems
 
|-
 
|Louisa Guise, Raytheon
 
|M.T.F.M. van de Ven, INCOSE ISSWG
 
|-
 
|Marcel van de Ven, Movares Nederland b.v.
 
|Mark Ardis, Stevens Institute of Technology
 
|-
 
|Mark Maier, The Aerospace Corporation
 
|Martin Nazareth
 
|-
 
|Matthew Petty
 
|Michael Bisconti, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Michael C. Dapp, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|Michael Coughenour, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Michael O'Neill, Georgia Tech Research Institute
 
|Michael Ryan, INCOSE Requirements Working Group
 
|-
 
|Michael Wilkinson, Niteworks/Atkins
 
|Michaelson, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Michele Hanna, Lockheed Martin
 
|Mike Gayle, Boeing
 
|-
 
|Mike O’Neill, Georgia Tech Research Institute
 
|Mike Prendergast, 
 
|-
 
|Mike Stemig, Raytheon
 
|Mike Yokel, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Nelson Roberts, Lockheed Martin
 
|Odile Mornas, Thales Université
 
|-
 
|Paola Di Maio, University of Strathclyde
 
|Patra Stroemer, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|Paul Joannou, IEEE Computer Society
 
|Paul Martellock, LMT
 
|-
 
|Peter Botman, Independent
 
|Peter Brook, Dashwood Consulting Ltd
 
|-
 
|Pieter Botman, Independent
 
|Prof. Ian Sommerville, School of Computer Science, University of St. Andrews
 
|-
 
|Qing Wang, ISCAS
 
|Richard Rifelli, Northrop Grumman
 
|-
 
|Ricardo Pineda
 
|Rob Schaaf, IEEE
 
|-
 
|Robert Cantrell, Raytheon IDS
 
|Robert Mottl, NGAS
 
|-
 
|Robert Rathbone, CASSIDIAN Air Systems (EADS)
 
|Roddey Smith, NGC/NGAS/AMS/CWIN
 
|-
 
|Roger C. Pare, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|Rolan Mazzella, THALES
 
|-
 
|Roland MAZZELLA, Thales
 
|Ronald Fradenburg, Ingalls Shipbuilding
 
|-
 
|Roxann Marumoto, Raytheon
 
|Scott Jackson, University of Southern California
 
|-
 
|Scott Werner, Honeywell Technology Services Incorporated (Colorado Springs)
 
|Shirley Tseng
 
|-
 
|Spurge Norman, MITRE
 
|Stephanie White, Long Island University, C.W. Post Campus
 
|-
 
|Stephen Townsend, PMI
 
|Susan Ferreira,University of Texas at Arlington
 
|-
 
|Susan Murray, Missouri S&T
 
|Theodora Saunders, IEEE AES, IEEE Sys Council, AHS
 
|-
 
|Thomas Tudron, Lockheed Martin
 
|Timothy W. Lohr, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|-
 
|Velda G. Musgrove, Lockheed Martin MS2
 
|Vidyut Navelkar, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd.
 
|-
 
|Vincenzo Arrichiello, SELEX Sistemi Integrati SpA
 
|Wayne Collier, Siemens PLM Software
 
|-
 
|Wayne O’Brien, Raytheon
 
|Weaver, Lockheed Martin
 
|-
 
|William Ely, 
 
|William Golaz, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics
 
|-
 
|William J. Brocker, Brocker Engineering
 
|William Moore, Northrop Grumman Corporation
 
|-
 
|William R. Lyders, ASSETT Inc.
 
|Yoshihiro Matsumoto, ASTEM Research Institute
 
|-
 
|columspan=“2”|Yvonne Simms, Boeing
 
|}
 
</center>
 
 
 
{{DISQUS}}
 

Latest revision as of 20:26, 19 November 2023

Video Created by Rob Cloutier. (2019 SEBoK Editor in Chief, SEBoK Original)

This article describes the contributors to the current version of the SEBoK. For information on contributors to past versions of the SEBoK, please follow the links under "SEBoK Release History" below.

The BKCASE Project began in the fall of 2009. Its aim was to add to the professional practice of systems engineering by creating two closely related products:

  • Guide to the Systems Engineering Body of Knowledge (SEBoK)
  • Graduate Reference Curriculum for Systems Engineering (GRCSE)

BKCASE History, Motivation, and Value

The Guide to the Systems Engineering Body of Knowledge (SEBoK) is a living authoritative guide that discusses knowledge relevant to Systems Engineering. It defines how that knowledge should be structured to facilitate understanding, and what reference sources are the most important to the discipline. The curriculum guidance in the Graduate Reference Curriculum for Systems Engineering (GRCSE) (Pyster and Olwell et al. 2015) makes reference to sections of the SEBoK to define its core knowledge; it also suggests broader program outcomes and objectives which reflect aspects of the professional practice of systems engineering as discussed across the SEBoK.

Between 2009 and 2012, BKCASE was led by Stevens Institute of Technology and the Naval Postgraduate School in coordination with several professional societies and sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), which provided generous funding. More than 75 authors and many other reviewers and supporters from dozens of companies, universities, and professional societies across 10 countries contributed many thousands of hours writing the SEBoK articles; their organizations provided significant other contributions in-kind.

The SEBoK came into being through recognition that the systems engineering discipline could benefit greatly by having a living authoritative guide closely related to those groups developing guidance on advancing the practice, education, research, work force development, professional certification, standards, etc.

At the beginning of 2013, BKCASE transitioned to a new governance model with shared stewardship between the Systems Engineering Research Center (SERC), the International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE), and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Computer Society (IEEE-CS). This governance structure was formalized in a memorandum of understanding between the three stewards that was finalized in spring of 2013 and subsequently updated. In January 2020, the IEEE Systems Council replaced the IEEE-CS in representing IEEE as a steward. The stewards have reconfirmed their commitment to making the SEBoK available at no cost to all users, a key principle of BKCASE.

As of May 2022, SEBoK articles have had over 6M pageviews from more than 2M unique visitors. We hope the SEBoK will regularly be used by thousands of systems engineers and others around the world as they undertake technical activities such as eliciting requirements, creating systems architectures, or analyzing system test results; and professional development activities such as developing career paths for systems engineers, and deciding new curricula for systems engineering university programs.

Governance

The SEBoK is shaped by the SEBoK Editorial Board and is overseen by the BKCASE Governing Board. A complete list of members for each of these bodies can be found on the BKCASE Governance and Editorial Board page.

Content and Feature Updates for version 2.9

This version was released on 20 November 2023. This release included:

SEBoK Release History

There have been 21 releases of the SEBoK to date.

Main Releases

  • Version 2.9 - current version.
  • Version 2.8 - this release included new articles on systems engineering and enterprise IT, and system adaptability; minor updates to several articles throughout the wiki; imrpovements to the wiki infrastructure; and Rob Cloutier's final edition of the SEBoK as Editor-in-Chief.
  • Version 2.7 - this release included new articles on loss-driven systems engineering and the history of systems engineering; updates to the article on systems and industrial engineering; and minor updates to improve resources and align with evolving practices throughout part 3, including in the articles around systems engineering standards and to the articles in Part 5, particularly the addition of new resources. There were also some improvements in the SEBoK wiki infrastructure.
  • Version 2.6 - this update included substantial evolution of Parts 2 and 3, the foundations of systems engineering and systems engineering approaches, methods, processes, and tools. The version also included more information on Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) and Digital Engineering, refinement of systems science foundations of systems engineering, and a new article on agile approaches. In Part 6 there were many new articles and updates to existing articles on the relationships between systems engineering and other disciplines.
  • Version 2.5 - This version included an update of the main page; creation of the Editor's Corner; new sponsors and sponsorship packages; new navigation in the left-hand menu; small edits to address the comments received from the community. This release also updated to the latest version of MediaWiki, tightened up the IT infrastructure, and made some adjustments to improve performance.
  • Version 2.4 - This was a minor release, including reorganizations of Part 6 and 8 to handle new knowledge areas and topics. In addition, several new articles were added, including, Systems Engineering Heuristics, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Systems Engineering and Geospatial/Geodetic Engineering Knowledge Area, System Hardware Assurance, Socio-technical Systems, Verification and Validation of Systems in Which AI is a Key Element, and an introductory article on Artificial Intelligence. The content on Systems of Systems (SoS) was also updated.
  • Version 2.3 - This was a minor release, including two new articles: Cycles and the Cyclic Nature of Systems and Portfolio Management. A number of additional minor edits, including a new overview graphic for the SEBoK, cleanup of existing pages, software updates, etc. were incorporated.
  • Version 2.2 - This was a significant release, including the first new Part to be added since v. 1.0 - Emerging Knowledge - which is a place to highlight new topics in systems engineering that are important but may not yet have a large body of literature. Recent dissertations around emerging topics are also included. A new case study on Apollo 1 was added to Part 7, which has also been reorganized around topics. Additional minor updates have occurred throughout.
  • Version 2.1 - This was a significant release with new articles, new functionality, and minor updates throughout.
  • Version 2.0 - This was a major release of the SEBoK which included incorporation of multi-media and a number of changes to the functions of the SEBoK.
  • Version 1.9.1 - This was a micro release of the SEBoK which included updates to the editorial board, and a number of updates to the wiki software.
  • Version 1.9 - This was a minor update which included updates to the System Resilience article in Part 6: Related Disciplines, as well as a major restructuring of Part 7: Systems Engineering Implementation Examples. A new example has been added around the use of model based systems engineering for the thirty-meter telescope.
  • Version 1.8 - This was a minor update, including an update of the Systems of Systems (SoS) knowledge area in Part 4: Applications of Systems Engineering where a number of articles were updated on the basis of developments in the area as well as on comments from the SoS and SE community. Part 6: Related Disciplines included updates to the Manufacturability and Producibility and Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability articles.
  • Version 1.7 - This was a minor update, including a new Healthcare SE Knowledge Area (KA), expansion of the MBSE area with two new articles, Technical Leadership and Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability and a new case study on the Northwest Hydro System
  • Version 1.6 - This was a minor update, including a reorganization of Part 1 SEBoK Introduction, a new article on the Transition towards Model Based Systems Engineering and a new article giving an overview of Healthcare Systems Engineering, a restructure of the "Systems Engineering and Specialty Engineering" (now Systems Engineering and Quality Attributes) KA.
  • Version 1.5 - This was a minor update, including a restructure and extension of the Software Engineering Knowledge Area, two new case studies, and a number of corrections of typographical errors and updates of outdated references throughout the SEBoK.
  • Version 1.4 - This was a minor update, including changes related to ISO/IEC/IEEE 15288:2015 standard, three new case studies and updates to a number of articles.
  • Version 1.3 - This was a minor update, including three new case studies, a new use case, updates to several existing articles, and updates to references.
  • Version 1.2 - This was a minor update, including two new articles and a revision of several existing articles.
  • Version 1.1 - This was a minor update that made modest content improvements.
  • Version 1.0 - This was the first official version of the SEBoK intended for broad use and was released 15 September 2012.

Click on the links above to read more information about each release.


SEBoK v. 2.9, released 20 November 2023