Difference between revisions of "Conceptual Model"

From CIPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 47: Line 47:
 
[[Category:Modelling]]
 
[[Category:Modelling]]
 
{{#set:defined by=EU project|defined by=Belgium|defined by=Netherlands|defined by=United Kingdom|defined by=United States|defined by=NIST}}
 
{{#set:defined by=EU project|defined by=Belgium|defined by=Netherlands|defined by=United Kingdom|defined by=United States|defined by=NIST}}
 +
{{#set: Showmainpage=No}}

Latest revision as of 23:47, 28 June 2019


Definitions

European Project Definitions

CIPRNet project

The CIPRNet project [1] uses the following definition:

"A conceptual schema or conceptual data model is a map of concepts and their relationships. This describes the semantics of an organization and represents a series of assertions about its nature. Specifically, it describes the things of significance to an organization (entity classes), about which it is inclined to collect information, and characteristics of (attributes) and associations between pairs of those things of significance (relationships)." [2]

DIESIS project

The DIESIS project [3] gives the following definition:

"A conceptual schema or conceptual data model is a map of concepts and their relationships. This describes the semantics of an organization and represents a series of assertions about its nature. Specifically, it describes the things of significance to an organization (entity classes), about which it is inclined to collect information, and characteristics of (attributes) and associations between pairs of those things of significance (relationships)." [2]


Other International Definitions

National Definitions

Belgium

Model: een computeralgoritme op basis van wiskundige vergelijkingen die een bepaalde fysische realiteit beschrijven/nabootsen. [4]



Netherlands

Model: abstractie van de werkelijkheid. [5]



United Kingdom (UK)

Model in its broadest sense is a representation of how a system works and can be used to understand how the system will respond to inputs and other changes. [6]



United States

NIST
Model:  A very detailed description or scaled representation of one component of a larger system that can be created, operated, and analyzed to predict actual operational characteristics of the final produced component. (from: FIPS 201-2) [7]


Standard Definition

Discussion Topic

See also

Notes

References