Software that aggregates feeds from access control, intrusion detection, CCTV, alarms, and other physical-security subsystems into a single operational view for security operations centres.
What it is
PSIM (Physical Security Information Management) software pulls feeds from a building or campus's physical-security subsystems — access control, intrusion detection, video management (VMS), perimeter sensors, alarms, license-plate readers, and sometimes fire and life-safety systems — into a single operational console. Common platforms include Genetec Security Center, Milestone XProtect, Verint Situational Awareness, NICE Suspect Search, Honeywell Pro-Watch, and Hexagon Public Safety.
How it works
A PSIM platform connects to each subsystem via vendor APIs or standard protocols (ONVIF for cameras, OSDP for access control, BACnet for building systems). It normalises the events from each into a common schema, applies correlation rules ("door alarm + camera motion in the same zone within 5 seconds"), and presents the result on an operator console with map overlays, video pop-ups, and standard-operating- procedure prompts. Modern PSIM platforms expose browser-rendered operator consoles, which makes them first-class sources for a situation room wall.
Why it matters
Without PSIM, a security operations centre operator switches between a dozen vendor consoles to investigate a single incident. With PSIM, the correlation layer surfaces the relevant feeds automatically and the operator stays in one tool. The trade-off is integration complexity — PSIM deployments are always custom integration projects, and the per-subsystem connectors are the line item that overruns most often.
PSIM vs CAD vs VMS
Easy to confuse. CAD (Computer-Aided Dispatch — Motorola CommandCentral, Hexagon HxGN OnCall, Mark43) handles public-safety call and unit dispatch. VMS (Video Management System — Milestone XProtect, Genetec Stratocast, Avigilon Control Center) handles camera recording and playback. PSIM is the layer above VMS that correlates camera with access control and alarms and presents the unified picture. A public-safety EOC typically uses all three in different roles.