Auflistung nach Schlagwort "Safety requirements"
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- KonferenzbeitragGenerating Review Models to Validate Safety Requirements(Software Engineering 2023, 2023) Tenbergen, Bastian; Weyer, ThorstenThis talk discusses our approach for automatically generating review models for safety-critical systems presented in the paper [TW21] published in the Feb. ’21 issue of the Journal of Software and Systems Modeling. We present a semi-automated formal approach and tool support to generate Hazard Relation Diagrams. Enabled by mitigation tables, the approach consists of two transformation steps using OMG’s QVTo language [OMG16].
- KonferenzbeitragHazard Relation Diagrams(Software Engineering und Software Management 2018, 2018) Tenbergen, Bastian; Weyer, Thorsten; Pohl, KlausThis talk is based on a paper published in the Requirements Engineering Journal in May 2017. During the development of safety-critical systems, the development process must ensure that requirements, which are defined to mitigate a hazard, are adequate. Adequacy of such hazard-mitigating requirements (HMRs) means that the requirements may not oppose the system’s operational purpose and must sufficiently avoid, reduce, or control, the occurrence of the conditions that trigger the hazard. However, information about the occurrence of the hazard’s trigger conditions are a work product of hazard analyses during early stages of safety assessment, while HMRs are a work product of requirements engineering. Dependencies between HMRs and hazard analysis results are implicit and tacit. In consequence, there’s a risk that during validation, inadequacy of HMRs regarding their ability to mitigate a hazard remains covert. The result may be that the system is assumed to be safe, but in fact may still cause injury or death. We introduced Hazard Relation Diagrams (HRDs) as a means to integrate and graphically visualize hazard analysis results with HMRs. Herein, we also provide insights into their empirical evaluation and show that HRDs increase objectivity in rationales containing adequacy judgments.