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Overview of FEA Geospatial Profile, Version 0.3

This document provides an overview of geospatial concepts and models within the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA) framework. It covers performance, business, technology, service component, and data reference models, as well as geospatial interoperability and maturity models. The document also highlights the relevance of geospatial information to performance and offers guidance on integrating geospatial services into IT initiatives.

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Overview of FEA Geospatial Profile, Version 0.3

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  1. Overview of FEA Geospatial Profile, Version 0.3 Doug Nebert FGDC Secretariat

  2. Profile scope • Introduction to Geospatial concepts and its pervasive nature • Performance Reference Model • Business Reference Model • Technology Reference Model • Service Component Reference Model • Data Reference Model

  3. Performance RM Guidance • WHAT does geospatial contribute to performance within the line of business • HOW do information or technology elements in the line of sight relate geospatially? • Outlines measures associated with a NASA ROI study on value of interoperability planning

  4. Performance Model: WHAT Once geospatial relevancy is established, the geospatial services and analyses to support the IT business and operational functions can be demonstrated, benchmarked, and documented — specifically how the geospatial initiative can enhance, enable, leverage, and visualize or provide support services for integration initiatives.

  5. Performance Model: HOW Disparate data can be functionally linked through their location on the Earth’s surface. Using this spatial attribute of data can allow for data to be queried, accessed, analyzed, summarized, and visualized with in the context of location. Specific guidance is lacking, performance must be addressed case-by-case.

  6. Geospatial Interoperability Maturity Model (GIMM) • Not exactly a PRM item, but more evaluation of maturity of execution of integrated geospatial capabilities • Needs to be reconciled with the new Enterprise Architecture Assessment Framework (EAAF, Version 2.0) just released

  7. Business Reference Model • Geospatial is not a Line Of Business • Three main LoB identified in Profile: • Service for Citizens • Support Delivery of Services • Management of Government Resources • but … 20 LoB (64%) have primary geospatial elements, all 32 LoB benefit from geospatial • Geospatial activities listed in Appendix E

  8. Geospatial Business Language • Business statements to evaluate how a business process may reveal geospatial capabilities • GBL includes: • Application • Data • Function • Process • Technology

  9. Data Reference Model • Context – taxonomies, references locational taxonomies, topic cateogries from ISO 19115 • Sharing – OGC specifications for discovery, encoding, and transmission as applied to geospatial data • Description – FGDC and ISO Metadata Standards in force

  10. Service Component RM Current FEA lumps most geospatial service in one ‘component’: • Domain: Business Analytical Services • Service Type: Visualization • Component: Mapping, geospatial (GIS), elevation, GPS Approach to extend the SRM specificity to implementable service components Service components listed in Appendix G

  11. Desired Features of a Service Component • Encapsulation - A component should clearly separate the definition of the services that it provides from its implementation of those services. • Consumability – can be chained and minimally dependent on other services • Extensibility - to adapt to changes in the business and data while at the same time preserving services provided to existing consumers. • Standards-based

  12. Service characteristics, cont’d • Industry best practices and patterns • Well-documented • Cohesive Set of Services - Components should be factored in such a way that they provide a cohesive set of services. • Well-Defined and Broadly Available Licensing or SLA - A software component should be accompanied by a well-defined license or service-level agreement (SLA).

  13. Technology Reference Model • Specific standards with geospatial relevance relative to SRM/TRM component framework: • Content rendering • Wireless/Mobile/Voice • Data interchange • Middleware integration • Data format/classification • Data types / validation • Data transformation • Service discovery • Service description / interface Additional geospatial standards in Appendix H

  14. Reviews to-date on Version 0.3 • 15 federal and commercial responses received • Recurrent points: • Generally helpful for raising awareness • Request more specific implementation guidance • Clarification of scope and focus, link to NSDI • Make less focused on FEA, appealing to non-feds • More links to Best Practices and external artifacts

  15. Timetable • Pilot project kickoff meeting Thursday, Dec 8th, 2:30-4:30pm DOI, Room TBD • Comments on Version 0.3 being processed • Draft for technical editing will be produced December 15th • Draft Version 1.0 will be submitted to OMB and agencies in early January

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