Architecture of Interoperable Information Systems

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Architecture of Interoperable Information Systems

An Architecture of interoperable information systems describes how interoperating information systems can be efficiently designed and implemented. Since the invention of information system, concepts were created to describe how information systems can be connected to each other in an efficient manner. In the context of enterprise information systems in 2010 also a concept named "Architecture of Interoperable Information Systems" (AIOS) was published.

Terminology and Requirments

The automation of cross-organizational business processes is one of the most important trends of the information age. lnstead of a tight integration however, collaborating organizations rather strive for a loose coupling of their information systems. The information systems should be able to work together but retain as much independency as possible. This characteristic is also called interoperability. In the context of collaborating organizational systems which work together, the term Business Interoperability was proposed. In comparison to interoperability notions that focus on technical systems, this term refers to the capability of autonomous organizations to execute a collaborative business process among them. Information systems are systems that process information, i.e. they capture, transport, transform, store and offer information. Following the conception prevailing in information systems research, an information system comprises not only the hardware and software of an enterprise, but also the related human actors, business functions and processes as well as organization structures.[1] Architecture is defined as the “fundamental organization of a system, embodied in its components, their relationships to each other and the environment, and the principles governing its design and evolution” [2]

Business Interoperability Information System Information System Architecture

== Reference Architecture


References

[1] Compare BECKER & SCHÜTTE (2004), p. 33, and GABRIEL (2008). This broad understanding is also confirmed by the often-referenced “Framework for Information Systems Architecture” (ZACHMAN, 1987). [2] IEEE (2007).