Situation Assessment—An Essential Functionality for Resilient Navigation Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Resilience as Challenge
1.2. Resilience Principles
1.3. Situation Awareness
2. Ships’ Navigation System
2.1. Carriage Requirements
- ECDIS (Electronic Chart Display and Information System): it can either be supported by up-to-date paper charts or a secondary independent ECDIS device, which then renders the use of paper charts on board unnecessary.
- An auxiliary magnetic compass: interchangeable with the primary magnetic compass, independent of any power supply, it determines the magnetic course and to display its reading at the main steering position.
- a second radar, usually an s-Band radar.
- a second automatic tracking aid: a duplicate application to automatically plot the range and bearing of other targets to determine collision risks, which is functionally independent of the primary automatic radar plotting aid (ARPA).
2.2. Technical Systems for Detection and Indication of Threats
2.3. Threat Management by Socio-Technical Ship Navigation System
3. Case Studies
3.1. Resilience by Additional Capacities
3.2. Resilience by Tolerance
3.3. Resilience by Flexibility
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Principle | Capability | Attribute | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | absorption | to absorb the magnitude of disruption | capacity |
2 | physical redundancy | to overbridge single failures by redundant layout | |
3 | functional redundancy | to provide different ways to perform critical tasks | |
4 | layered defence | to apply two or more independent principles | |
5 | human in the loop | to use humans’ better dealing with unprecedented threats | flexibility |
6 | reduction of complexity | to limit the complexity to the necessary degree | |
7 | reorganization | to adjust structure and functioning to current situation | |
8 | reparability | to be prepared for recovery of origin functionality and performance | |
9 | loose coupling | to limit error propagation in complex, networked systems | |
10 | localized capacity | to perform the functionality using distributed resources | tolerance |
11 | drift correction | to mitigate risks by adjustment to changes | |
12 | neutral state | to ensure true situation awareness for right decisions | |
13 | Inter-node interaction | to ensure communication, cooperation, collaboration between nodes for a coordinated use of resources | cohesion |
14 | reduce hidden interactions | to avoid harmful interactions between nodes |
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Engler, E.; Baldauf, M.; Banyś, P.; Heymann, F.; Gucma, M.; Sill Torres, F. Situation Assessment—An Essential Functionality for Resilient Navigation Systems. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2020, 8, 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8010017
Engler E, Baldauf M, Banyś P, Heymann F, Gucma M, Sill Torres F. Situation Assessment—An Essential Functionality for Resilient Navigation Systems. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2020; 8(1):17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8010017
Chicago/Turabian StyleEngler, Evelin, Michael Baldauf, Paweł Banyś, Frank Heymann, Maciej Gucma, and Frank Sill Torres. 2020. "Situation Assessment—An Essential Functionality for Resilient Navigation Systems" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 8, no. 1: 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8010017
APA StyleEngler, E., Baldauf, M., Banyś, P., Heymann, F., Gucma, M., & Sill Torres, F. (2020). Situation Assessment—An Essential Functionality for Resilient Navigation Systems. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 8(1), 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse8010017