• DocumentCode
    3055688
  • Title

    Confidence: Its Role in Dependability Cases for Risk Assessment

  • Author

    Bloomfield, Robin E. ; Littlewood, Bev ; Wright, David

  • Author_Institution
    City Univ., London
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    25-28 June 2007
  • Firstpage
    338
  • Lastpage
    346
  • Abstract
    Society is increasingly requiring quantitative assessment of risk and associated dependability cases. Informally, a dependability case comprises some reasoning, based on assumptions and evidence, that supports a dependability claim at a particular level of confidence. In this paper we argue that a quantitative assessment of claim confidence is necessary for proper assessment of risk. We discuss the way in which confidence depends upon uncertainty about the underpinnings of the dependability case (truth of assumptions, correctness of reasoning, strength of evidence), and propose that probability is the appropriate measure of uncertainty. We discuss some of the obstacles to quantitative assessment of confidence (issues of composability of subsystem claims; of the multi-dimensional, multi-attribute nature of dependability claims; of the difficult role played by dependence between different kinds of evidence, assumptions, etc). We show that, even in simple cases, the confidence in a claim arising from a dependability case can be surprisingly low.
  • Keywords
    risk management; software reliability; claim confidence; dependability claim; risk assessment; Application software; Battery powered vehicles; Calculus; Costs; Humans; Measurement uncertainty; Probability; Risk management; Software reliability; Software safety;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Dependable Systems and Networks, 2007. DSN '07. 37th Annual IEEE/IFIP International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Edinburgh
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2855-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/DSN.2007.29
  • Filename
    4272985