DocumentCode :
1346339
Title :
Human Error Considerations in Determining the Optimum Test Interval for Periodically Inspected Standby Systems
Author :
McWilliams, T.P ; Martz, H.F.
Author_Institution :
Division of Statistics and Operations Research; College of Business Administration; University of Denver; Denver, CO 80208 USA.
Issue :
4
fYear :
1980
Firstpage :
305
Lastpage :
310
Abstract :
This paper incorporates the effects of two types of human error in a model for determining the optimal time between inspections for a safety system. The possibility that a bad safety system is undetected upon inspection (Type B human error), as well as the possibility that a good safety system is inadvertently left in a bad state after the inspection (Type A human error), are considered. We develop a Markov model for the steady-state availability of the safety system which is then used to determine the optimum time between inspections which either maximizes the availability or minimizes the combined inspection and unavailability costs. The safety system failure (hazard) rate need not be constant. The optimum time between inspections increases as the probability of a Type A error increases and a Type B error decreases. The optimum availability decreases and the optimum total cost increases as the error probabilities increase.
Keywords :
Availability; Cost function; Humans; Inspection; Maintenance; Power generation; Power system modeling; Safety; Steady-state; System testing; Human error; Optimum test interval; Periodic inspection; Reliability testing; Standby systems; System availability;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Reliability, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9529
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TR.1980.5220846
Filename :
5220846
Link To Document :
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