🤖 AI Summary
To address interdisciplinary interoperability, variant configuration governance, end-to-end traceability, and cross-organizational collaboration challenges arising from the networked evolution of Systems of Systems (SoS), this paper proposes a lifecycle management framework for Network-Centric Development (NCD). Methodologically, it grounds the framework in Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) semantics and integrates Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) governance, CAD-CAE model synchronization, and closed-loop digital thread/digital twin capabilities. Its core contributions are four foundational principles: (1) reference architecture with a unified data model; (2) end-to-end configuration sovereignty; (3) review-driven model gating; and (4) quantifiable value contribution assessment. Empirical validation across transportation, healthcare, and public-sector domains demonstrates significant improvements in change robustness and model reuse rate, reduced delivery cycles, and enhanced support for sustainability-oriented decision-making.
📝 Abstract
Today, products are no longer isolated artifacts, but nodes in networked systems. This means that traditional, linearly conceived life cycle models are reaching their limits: Interoperability across disciplines, variant and configuration management, traceability, and governance across organizational boundaries are becoming key factors. This collective contribution classifies the state of the art and proposes a practical frame of reference for SoS lifecycle management, model-based systems engineering (MBSE) as the semantic backbone, product lifecycle management (PLM) as the governance and configuration level, CAD-CAE as model-derived domains, and digital thread and digital twin as continuous feedback. Based on current literature and industry experience, mobility, healthcare, and the public sector, we identify four principles: (1) referenced architecture and data models, (2) end-to-end configuration sovereignty instead of tool silos, (3) curated models with clear review gates, and (4) measurable value contributions along time, quality, cost, and sustainability. A three-step roadmap shows the transition from product- to network- centric development: piloting with reference architecture, scaling across variant and supply chain spaces, organizational anchoring (roles, training, compliance). The results are increased change robustness, shorter throughput times, improved reuse, and informed sustainability decisions. This article is aimed at decision-makers and practitioners who want to make complexity manageable and design SoS value streams to be scalable.