Information technology — Specification and standardization of data elements — Part 1: Framework for the specification and standardization of data elements

Technologies de l'information — Spécification et normalisation des éléments de données — Partie 1: Cadre pour la spécification et la normalisation des éléments de données

General Information

Status
Withdrawn
Publication Date
15-Dec-1999
Withdrawal Date
15-Dec-1999
Current Stage
9599 - Withdrawal of International Standard
Completion Date
16-Sep-2004
Ref Project

Relations

Buy Standard

Standard
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999 - Information technology -- Specification and standardization of data elements
English language
32 pages
sale 15% off
Preview
sale 15% off
Preview

Standards Content (Sample)

INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 11179-1
First edition
1999-12-01
Information technology — Specification
and standardization of data elements —
Part 1:
Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements
Technologies de l'information — Spécification et normalisation des
éléments de données —
Partie 1: Cadre pour la spécification et la normalisation des éléments de
données
Reference number
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
©
ISO/IEC 1999

---------------------- Page: 1 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
PDF disclaimer
This PDF file may contain embedded typefaces. In accordance with Adobe's licensing policy, this file may be printed or viewed but shall not
be edited unless the typefaces which are embedded are licensed to and installed on the computer performing the editing. In downloading this
file, parties accept therein the responsibility of not infringing Adobe's licensing policy. The ISO Central Secretariat accepts no liability in this
area.
Adobe is a trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
Details of the software products used to create this PDF file can be found in the General Info relative to the file; the PDF-creation parameters
were optimized for printing. Every care has been taken to ensure that the file is suitable for use by ISO member bodies. In the unlikely event
that a problem relating to it is found, please inform the Central Secretariat at the address given below.
© ISO/IEC 1999
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying and microfilm, without permission in writing from either ISO at the address below or ISO's member body
in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
Case postale 56 � CH-1211 Geneva 20
Tel. + 41 22 749 01 11
Fax + 41 22 734 10 79
E-mail copyright@iso.ch
Web www.iso.ch
Printed in Switzerland
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
ii

---------------------- Page: 2 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Contents Page
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative References . 1
3 Definitions . 1
4 Abbreviations . 9
5 Methodology Independence . 10
6 Fundamental Concepts of Data Elements . 10
7 Relationship of Data Elements to Other Data Concepts . 11
8 Overview of ISO/IEC 11179, Parts 1-6 . 12
Annex A Fundamental Concepts of Data Representation and Management .17
Annex B Metadata and Data Elements . 30
Bibliography . 32
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
iii

---------------------- Page: 3 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical Commission) form the
specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are members of ISO or IEC participate in the
development of International Standards through technical committees established by the respective organization to deal with
particular fields of technical activity. ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other
international organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the work.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 3.
In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee, ISO/IEC JTC 1. Draft
International Standards adopted by the joint technical committee are circulated to national bodies for voting. Publication as an
International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the national bodies casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this part of ISO/IEC 11179 may be the subject of patent
rights. ISO and IEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
International Standard ISO/IEC 11179-1 was prepared by Joint Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology,
Subcommittee SC 32, Data management services.
ISO/IEC 11179 consists of the following parts, under the general title Information technology — Specification and
standardization of data elements:
� Part 1:Framework for the specification and standardization of data elements
� Part 2: Classification for data elements
� Part 3: Basic attributes of data elements
� Part 4: Rules and guidelines for the formulation of data definitions
� Part 5: Naming and identification principles for data elements
� Part 6: Registration of data elements
Annexes A and B of this part of ISO/IEC 11179 are for information only.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
iv

---------------------- Page: 4 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Introduction
Background
Humans are aware of anything that exists in the natural world through its properties. Data represents the properties of these
things. Specification of data elements, the basic units of data, involves documenting relevant characteristics of each data
element to ensure its representation of the natural world item is consistent and accurate. Data that has been carefully specified
and standardized greatly enhances its usefulness and shareability across systems and environments. Sharing data involves the
ability to locate desired data, retrieve the data, and to exchange the data with others. When data elements are well documented
according to ISO/IEC 11179 and the documentation is managed in a Data Element Registry, finding and retrieving them from
disparate databases as well as sending and receiving them via electronic communications are made easier.
The recognition and standardization of data elements used in communications through automated information processing
systems is an ongoing and essential activity. The success of this activity and its application throughout the world is of vital
importance if international communications among governments, businesses, and scientific communities are to be improved.
The primary data sharing and standardization problems addressed by the development of ISO/IEC 11179 include, but are not
limited to the following:
� A lack of mechanisms for enabling global data acquisition and interchange, particularly across application
areas;
� Unique global identifiers for standard data elements currently do not exist;
� Documentation of data element characteristics is inadequate to support fully automated sharing of data,
including locating, retrieving, and exchanging the data;
� There is a lack of uniform guidance for identification, development, and description of data elements;
� Finding and retrieving a specific standard data element among thousands or millions is difficult or
impossible;
� No universal means for organizing standard data elements exists;
� While data is sometimes standardized within an organization, there are few common data standards between
organizations;
� Exchange of data among organizations results in a proliferation of customized data interchange
representations;
� Data definitions and descriptions are not sufficiently precise to support reuse or multiple users of data;
� Current inventory structures for reducing logical data redundancies are inadequate;
� Global implementation of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) is impeded by a lack of standard data elements;
standard data elements are needed for the content of EDI messages.
To facilitate global electronic communications, the International Standards community has been working diligently to define
an Open Systems Interconnection Environment (OSIE) within which diverse computer hardware and applications could share
information. Standards have been proposed or defined for three (hardware, software, and communications) of the four
(hardware, software, communications, and data) basic components required for open information processing systems. ISO/IEC
11179 for data specification, the fourth basic component for open information systems, provides a mechanism for enabling
data to be shared in the OSIE.
For systems to be truly open, data must be portable and shareable within and among these various application environments,
which span localized and distributed networks. For data to be shareable, both the users and owners of data must have a
common understanding of its meaning, representation, and identification. To understand the meaning of any data, the
descriptions of the data must be available to the users from, for example, a Data Element Registry. Data must be adequately
described and users must have a convenient way to obtain these descriptions. Data Element Registries provide a way to
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
v

---------------------- Page: 5 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
organize the content and representation of data elements so that data descriptions are consistently specified and can be easily
located by data designers and users. Uniform specification of data facilitates data retrieval, data exchange, and consistent use
of data throughout the Software Development Life Cycle. The units of information with normalized meanings and formats are
known as "standardized data elements."
Purpose of ISO/IEC 11179
ISO/IEC 11179 describes the standardizing and registering of data elements to make data understandable and shareable. Data
element standardization and registration as described in ISO/IEC 11179 allow the creation of a shared data environment in
much less time and with much less effort than it takes for conventional data management methodologies.
The purpose of ISO/IEC 11179 is to give concrete guidance on the formulation and maintenance of discrete data element
descriptions and semantic content (metadata) that shall be used to formulate data elements in a consistent, standard manner. It
also provides guidance for establishing a data element registry.
Although motivated by the desire for the open exchange of data throughout the international communities by electronic
information interchanges, ISO/IEC 11179:
� facilitates acquisition and registration of data;
� expedites access and use of data;
� simplifies data manipulation by intelligent software by enabling manipulation of data based on
characteristics described by metadata;
� enables the development of a data representation metamodel for CASE tools and repositories; and
� facilitates electronic data interchange and data sharing.
ISO/IEC 11179 benefits the communication of data among information systems and people:
� within an organization;
� among different organizations; and
� crossing all levels of software and hardware, and geographic, organizational and political boundaries.
Metadata about data elements is stored in a data element registry. A data element registry supports data sharing with
descriptions of data. Registration is the process of documenting metadata to support data shareability. Registration should be
carried out at the data element level to promote and maximize semantic value. ISO/IEC 11179 enables the end user to interpret
the intended meaning confidently, correctly, and unambiguously.
Users of ISO/IEC 11179
For users and managers of data, ISO/IEC 11179 specifies a basic set of data element characteristics necessary to share data. It
places special emphasis on important data element characteristics such as identifiers, definitions, and classification categories.
ISO/IEC 11179 describes a data element registry to assist users of shared data to have a common understanding of a data
elements meaning, representation, and identification. If data values are received, the user can discover the exact meaning of
the data received. If users wish to retrieve data values from a database, they can identify the type of data desired.
For systems analysts and data stewards, ISO/IEC 11179 provides a way to reuse a data element that meets a need, or to design
a new data element if one does not already exist. Even before the user accesses data elements in a database, data stewards and
systems analysts must have a way to identify and describe data logically so that they do not inadvertently introduce
inconsistent values of data. If systems analysts are to create products that share data, they must first be aware whether or not a
data element with the required characteristics already exists. If it does, they should use it. If the systems analysts choose to
replicate the data element, they must represent data elements containing the same information in the same manner. If a data
element with exactly the same characteristics does not already exist, a data steward needs to design the data element and make
its description available to software developers. ISO/IEC 11179 aids in the development of precise descriptions of data
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
vi

---------------------- Page: 6 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
elements. Data elements that have been formulated according to the principles in this multi-part International Standard enable
interchangeability and retrieval regardless of the information processing system or telecommunication protocols employed.
For software developers, ISO/IEC 11179 provides means to assure data coherence. A registry can serve software developers by
enabling the consistent use of data throughout the Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC). A registry will provide the
mechanisms for managing data elements and for ensuring their traceability between SDLC phases.
For developers of a data dictionary, data element registry, CASE tool, and other data management software, ISO/IEC 11179
provides the basis for designing a metamodel necessary to enable the capture, storage, management, and exchange of the data
element metadata.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
vii

---------------------- Page: 7 ----------------------
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Information technology — Specification and standardization of data
elements —
Part 1:
Framework for the specification and standardization of data elements
1. Scope
ISO/IEC 11179 specifies basic aspects of data element composition, including metadata. It applies to
formulation of data element representations and meaning as shared among people and machines; it does not
apply to the physical representation of data as bits and bytes at the machine level.
This part of ISO/IEC 11179 provides the context for associating the individual parts and is the foundation for a
conceptual understanding of data elements.
2. Normative References
The following normative documents contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute
provisions of this part of ISO/IEC 11179. For dated references, subsequent amendments to, or revisions of, any
of these publications do not apply. However, parties to agreements based on this part of ISO/IEC 11179 are
encouraged to investigate the possibility of applying the most recent editions of the normative documents
indicated below. For undated references, the latest edition of the normative document referred to applies.
Members of ISO and IEC maintain registers of currently valid International Standards.
ISO Standards Handbook 10, Data Processing - Vocabulary, 1982.
ISO 704:1987, Principles and methods of terminology.
ISO 1087, Terminology - Vocabulary.
ISO 2382-4:1987, Information processing systems - Vocabulary - Part 4: Organization of data.
ISO/IEC 10241:1992, International terminology standards - Preparation and layout.
ISO/IEC 11179-2, Information technology - Specification and standardization of data elements - Part 2:
Classification for data elements.
ISO/IEC 11179-3:1994, Information technology - Specification and standardization of data elements - Part 3:
Basic attributes of data elements.
ISO/IEC 11179-4:1995, Information technology - Specification and standardization of data elements - Part 4:
Rules and guidelines for the formulation of data definitions.
ISO/IEC 11179-5:1995, Information technology - Specification and standardization of data elements - Part 5:
Naming and identification principles for data elements.
ISO/IEC 11179-6:1997, Information technology - Specification and standardization of data elements - Part 6:
Registration of data elements.
3. Definitions
For the purposes of ISO/IEC 11179, the following terms are defined in the table below. An X under the column
heading for a Part indicates that the term is defined in that Part and used in other clauses there. Each word that
appears in bold in the definition of a term is a term defined elsewhere in this clause. Words that appear in
regular type assume their commonly understood definitions. Some words (e.g. representation) are used both
ways. There are instances where two or more terms appear next to each other in a definition, giving the
appearance that a new term is undefined. There is no ambiguity in determining the actual terms in these cases.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved 1

---------------------- Page: 8 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.1 administered A component for which administrative
X
component: attributes are collected.
3.2 administrative status: A designation of the position in the processing
X X
life-cycle of a registration authority for
handling registration requests.
3.3 attribute: A characteristic of an object or entity. X X X X X X
3.4 attribute value: A representation of an instance of an attribute. X
3.5 certified data element: A recorded data element that has met the
X X
quality requirements specified in ISO/IEC
11179.
3.6 classification scheme: An arrangement or division of objects into
X X X
groups based on characteristics that the objects
have in common, e.g., origin, composition,
structure, application, function, etc.
3.7 classification scheme A component of content in a classification
item: scheme. This may be a node in a taxonomy or X
ontology, a term in a thesaurus,etc.
3.8 classified component: Any component of a data element that may be
classified in one or more classification X
schemes. These components include the object
class, property, representation class, data
element concept, value domain,and data
element.
3.9 comments: Remarks on the data element. X X
3.10 concept: A unit of thought constituted through X X X
abstraction on the basis of characteristics
common to a set of objects. [ISO 1087]
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
2

---------------------- Page: 9 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.11 context: A designation or description of the application
X X X
environment or discipline in which a name is
applied or from which it originates.
3.12 data: A representation of facts, concepts, or
X X X X
instructions in a formalized manner, suitable for
communication, interpretation, or processing by
humans or by automatic means. [ISO 2382-4]
3.13 data dictionary: A database used for data that refers to the use
X X X
and structure of other data; that is, a database
for the storage of metadata [ANSI X3.172-
1990]. See also data element dictionary.
3.14 data element: Aunitof data for which the definition,
X X X X X X
identification, representation, and permissible
values are specified by means of a set of
attributes.
3.15 data element concept: A concept that can be represented in the form
X X X X X
of a data element, described independently of
any particular representation.
3.16 data element An information resource that lists and defines X X X
dictionary: all relevant data elements. See also register.
3.17 data element facet: Any aspect of a data element that is subject to
X
classification. This includes object class,
property, representation,and data element
concept.
3.18 data element name: A single or multi-word designation used as the X
primary means of identification of data
elements for humans.
3.19 data element registry: An information resource kept by a registration
authority that describes the meaning and X
representational form of data elements,
including registration identifiers, definitions,
names, value domains, metadata and
administrative attributes, etc. See also
register.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
3

---------------------- Page: 10 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.20 data element value: A value out of a set of permissible values
X X
pertaining to a data element. See also data
value.
3.21 data identifier (DI): An identifier of a data element (a string of
X X
characters or other graphic symbols) assigned
by a registration authority.
3.22 data item: Oneoccurrenceofa data element. X
3.23 data model: A description of the organization of data in a X
manner that reflects an information structure.
3.24 data steward: A person or organization delegated the
X
responsibility for managing a specific set of
data resources.
3.25 datatype: The format used for the collection of letters,
X
digits, and/or symbols, to depict values of a
data element, determined by the operations
that may be performed on the data element.
3.26 datatype of data A set of distinct values for representing the X X
element values: data element value.
3.27 data value: An element of a value domain. X
3.28 definition: A word or phrase expressing the essential
X X X X
nature of a person or thing or class of persons or
things: an answer to the question "what is x?"
or"whatisan x?";astatementofthe meaning
of a word or word group [Webster's Third New
International Dictionary of the English
Language Unabridged, 1986]. Statement that
expresses the essential nature of a data element
and permits its differentiation from all other
data elements.
3.29 domain: The set of possible data values of an attribute. X X X
[ISO/IEC 2382]. See also value domain.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
4

---------------------- Page: 11 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.30 entity: Any concrete or abstract thing of interest,
X X
including associations among things. [ISO/IEC
2382]. Also see object class.
3.31 enumerated domain: A value domain that is specified by a list of all X
permissible values.
3.32 form of representation: Name or description of the form of
X X
representation for the data element.e.g.
'quantitative value, 'code', 'text', 'icon'. See also
representation term.
3.33 identifier: A language independent unique identifier of a
X X X X X X
data element within a registration authority.
See also data identifier. An unambiguous
name for an object within a given context.
3.34 information: (In information processing): Knowledge
concerning objects, such as facts, events, X
things, processes, or ideas, including concepts,
that within a certain context has a particular
meaning. [ISO/IEC 2382]
3.35 information The process of sending and receiving data in
X X
interchange: such a manner that the information content or
meaning assigned to the data is not altered
during the transmission.
3.36 international An internationally unique identifier for a data
X
registration data element.
identifier (IRDI):
3.37 keyword: One or more significant words used for retrieval X X X
of data elements.
3.38 layout of The layout of characters in data element X X
representation: values expressed by a character string
representation.
3.39 lexical: Pertaining to words or the vocabulary of a
X X
language as distinguished from its grammar and
construction.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
5

---------------------- Page: 12 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.40 maximum size of data The maximum number of storage units (of the
X X
element values: corresponding datatype)torepresentthe data
element value.
3.41 metadata: Data that defines and describes other data. X
3.42 minimum size of data The minimum number of storage units (of the
X X
element values: corresponding datatype)torepresent the data
element value.
3.43 name: The primary means of identification of objects
X X X X X X
and concepts for humans. A single or multi-
word designation assigned to a data element.
3.44 object: Any part of the conceivable or perceivable X
world. [ISO 1087].
3.45 object class: Aset of objects. A set of ideas, abstractions, or
X
things in the real world that can be identified
with explicit boundaries and meaning and
whose properties and behavior follow the same
rules.
3.46 object class term: A component of the name of a data element
X X
which represents the object class to which it
belongs; e.g. "employee".
3.47 permissible data The set of representations of permissible
X X
element values: instances of the data element, according to the
representation form, layout, datatype,
maximum size,and minimum size specified in
the corresponding attributes. The set can be
specified by name, by reference to a source, by
enumeration of the representation of the
instances, or by rules for generating instances.
3.48 property: A peculiarity common to all members of an X
object class.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
6

---------------------- Page: 13 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.49 property term: A component of the data element name which
X X
expresses a property of an object class.(A
component of the name of a data element
which expresses the category to which the data
element belongs.)
3.50 qualifier: A term that helps define and render a concept X
unique.
3.51 qualifier term: A word or words which help define and X
differentiate a name within the database.
3.52 recorded data element: A submitted data element which contains all
X X
mandatory attributes and has been recorded
but the contents may not meet the quality
requirements specified in other parts of
ISO/IEC 11179.
3.53 register: A set of files (paper, electronic, or a
X
combination) containing the assigned data
elements and the associated information. See
also data element registry.
3.54 registration: The assignment of an unambiguous identifier
X X
to a data element in a way that makes the
metadata about those data elements available
to interested parties.
3.55 registration applicant: An organization, individual, etc, which requests
X
the assignment of an identifier from a
registration authority.
3.56 registration authority An organization authorized to register data
(RA): elements or other objects. X X X X
3.57 registration authority An identifier assigned to a registration X X X X
identifier (RAI): authority.
3.58 registration status: A designation of the position in the X X X
registration life-cycle of a data element.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
7

---------------------- Page: 14 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.59 related data reference: A reference between a data element and any X X
related data.
3.60 representation: The combination of a value domain, datatype,
X
and, if necessary, a unit of measure or a
character set.
3.61 representation category: Type of symbol, character, or other designation X X
used to represent a data element.
3.62 representation term: A component of a data element name which
X X
describes the form of representation of the
data element.
3.63 responsible The organization or unit within an organization
X X
organization: that is responsible for the contents of the
mandatory attributes by which the data
element is specified.
3.64 semantics: The branch of linguistic science which deals X X
with the meaning of words (Webster).
3.65 separator: A symbol or space enclosing or separating X
components within a name; a delimiter.
3.66 standardized data A certified data element within the data X X
element: element registry that is preferred for use.
3.67 structure set: A method of placing objects in context,
X
revealing relationships to other objects.
Examples include entity-relationship models,
taxonomies, and ontologies.
3.68 submitting organization The organization or unit within an organization
X X
(SO): that has submitted the data element for
addition, change, cancellation, or withdrawal in
the data element registry.
3.69 synonymous name: Single or multi-word designation that differs
X X
from the given name, but represents the same
data element concept.
© ISO/IEC 1999 – All rights reserved
8

---------------------- Page: 15 ----------------------
ISO/IEC 11179-1:1999(E)
Part Number
Number
Term Definition 1 2 3 4 5 6
3.70 syntax: The structure of expressions in a language, and
X X
the rules governing the structure of a language.
The relationships among c
...

Questions, Comments and Discussion

Ask us and Technical Secretary will try to provide an answer. You can facilitate discussion about the standard in here.