2010
DOI: 10.1080/0951192x.2010.490275
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The lifecycle of active and intelligent products: The augmentation concept

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Cited by 50 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…In this one the product, a decisional entity called an ''active'' product (AP), is modeled as holon. This concept of ''activity'' was introduced by Sallez, Berger, Deneux et al (2010) and can be applied from a product life management perspective, from the design of the product to its recycling. An AP is at least able to trigger events.…”
Section: Holonic Control Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In this one the product, a decisional entity called an ''active'' product (AP), is modeled as holon. This concept of ''activity'' was introduced by Sallez, Berger, Deneux et al (2010) and can be applied from a product life management perspective, from the design of the product to its recycling. An AP is at least able to trigger events.…”
Section: Holonic Control Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, only the resources were considered as decisional entities (Trentesaux, Dindeleux et al, 1998). Several studies have expanded this heterarchical control concept by assigning decision-making capabilities to products (Berger, Sallez, Valli, Gibaud, & Trentesaux, 2010;Sallez, Berger, Deneux et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These standards have been classified according to the most common approach used in the literature (Stark 2006, Jun et al 2007, Terzi et al 2008, Sallez et al 2010 that divides the lifecycle of a product into three main parts (Figure 1). These standards have been classified according to the most common approach used in the literature (Stark 2006, Jun et al 2007, Terzi et al 2008, Sallez et al 2010 that divides the lifecycle of a product into three main parts (Figure 1).…”
Section: Mapping Of Product Data Standardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The promising concept of closed-loop Product Life-cycle Management (PLM) would typically gain from using intelligent or distributed control system. For example, an intelligent product could enhance the exchange of information and feedback toward the different phases of the product's life cycle and the next product generation (e.g., from maintenance to re-design, from exploitation to production) (Sallez et al 2010). PLM could be generalized to many industrial areas and/or complex systems, especially in the health care sector or in the construction sector, opening the way toward Product Service Systems (PSS) (Morelli 2006).…”
Section: Closed-loop Plm and Intelligent Productsmentioning
confidence: 99%