MITRE
 
About Us Our Work Employment News & Events
MITRE Remote Access for MITRE Employees Site Map
Home > Our Work > Technical Papers >

Loose Couplers as an Information Design Strategy

June 2007

Dr. Robert W. Miller, The MITRE Corporation
Daniel G. Winkowski, The MITRE Corporation

ABSTRACT

Net-Centric operations are predicated upon loose coupling among participants. Existing approaches to loose coupling have focused on the information and network interfaces, not on information design methodology. Cursor on Target has been described as a loose coupler that provides a strategy to exchange a minimal amount of structured, high impact information in a variety of use cases among battlefield participants. In this paper we provide an in-depth analysis of the loose coupler concept. We define a loose coupler as an information object design that optimizes data utilization (production and consumption) among a community of independent participants while globally minimizing costs (development and employment). Local efficiencies of point-to-point information design yield to the greater global efficiencies of the information environment in which a loose coupler operates. We investigate data sharing usage patterns and infospace environments within and across communities of interest and use these to identify characteristics of loose coupler design. We provide examples of loose couplers in both commercial and military environments. A loose coupler design methodology is discussed and we suggest opportunities for further research in this area.

» Download Paper [PDF, 394KB]

Additional Search Keywords

N/A

 

Page last updated: July 2, 2007   |   Top of page

Homeland Security Center Center for Enterprise Modernization Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence Center Center for Advanced Aviation System Development

 
 
 

Serving as Architects of Information Advantage.™
Copyright © 1997-2008, The MITRE Corporation. All rights reserved.
MITRE is a registered trademark of The MITRE Corporation.
Material on this site may be copied and distributed with permission only.

 

Privacy Policy | Contact Us

Boston Business Journal Best Places to Work 2007 Computerworld Best Places to Work in IT 2005-2007 Fortune 100 Best Places to Work 2002-2008