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IEEE 1516-2000

IEEE Standard for Modeling and Simulation (M&S) High Level ARchitecture (HLA) - Framework and Rules

Standard by IEEE, 2000

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  • Language: English
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  • Language: English
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IEEE 1516-2000 defines the High Level Architecture framework and rules for modeling and simulation in computing and processing environments. It sets out the core structure used to support interoperable simulation components, helping different systems work together in a controlled and predictable way. For organizations building or integrating HLA-based simulation solutions, this standard is important because it establishes common rules that can improve consistency, exchange, and coordination across complex technical applications.

About IEEE 1516-2000

This standard describes the framework and governing rules for High Level Architecture, a modeling and simulation approach used to organize distributed simulation systems. IEEE 1516-2000 is concerned with how simulations are structured so participating components can interact through a shared architecture rather than isolated, custom interfaces. In practice, it supports technical teams that need a common basis for design, implementation, and verification when building simulation environments that must remain interoperable over time.

Where is IEEE 1516-2000 used?

IEEE 1516-2000 is commonly relevant in distributed simulation environments where multiple software models or simulators must coordinate through a shared HLA framework. It may be used in system-level training, engineering analysis, test environments, and other computing applications that depend on synchronized simulation behavior. The standard is particularly useful when different tools, subsystems, or organizations must exchange simulation data in a consistent way without relying on one-off integration methods.

Importance in practice

In practice, IEEE 1516-2000 helps reduce integration risk by defining a stable architectural basis for simulation interoperability. That can support clearer requirements, more consistent implementation, and easier testing across connected simulation components. For procurement or compliance work, it gives buyers and engineering teams a precise reference point when evaluating whether a system follows the expected HLA framework. It also helps improve design control by limiting ambiguity in how simulation entities and interactions are managed.

  • HLA framework and rules
  • Distributed simulation interoperability
  • Model and simulator coordination
  • Verification and integration reference
  • Computing and processing applications
SKU: 7c59b50477e7

  • Publication Date: 2000
  • Standard Status: Superseded
  • Publisher: IEEE
  • Subject: Computing and Processing
  • Official IEEE: Doi link
  • New Version Available: 1516 (2025)
  • Previous Version: 1516 (2010)
  • This Version: 1516 (2000)

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