Showing posts with label Engineering a Safer World – Thinking Applied to Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Engineering a Safer World – Thinking Applied to Safety. Show all posts

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Read this Book ...


Engineering a Safer World Thinking Applied to Safety, by Nancy Leveson

Publisher: The MIT Press (Jan 13 2012), pages: 560
Publication Date: Jan 13 2012 | ISBN-10: 0262016621 | ISBN-13: 978-0262016629
Cost: $40/-




Engineers are facing every day a set of new challenges, caused by a steady technological revolution and by our increasing reliance on systems of increasing complexity. Yet, the basic engineering techniques applied in safety and reliability engineering, created for a simpler, analog world, have changed very little over the years.

In the book Nancy Leveson, Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics and also Professor of En-gineering Systems at MIT and IAASS fellow, describes a new approach to safety and risk management, better suited to today's complex, socio-technical, software-intensive world - based on modern systems thinking and systems theory.

Revisiting and updating ideas pioneered by 1950s aerospace engineers in their System Safety concept, and testing her new model extensively on real-world examples, Leveson has created a new approach to safety that is more effective, less expensive, and easier to use than current techniques. Arguing that traditional models of causality are inadequate, Leveson presents a new, extended model of causation (Systems-Theoretic Accident Model and Processes, or STAMP), then then shows how the new model can be used to create techniques for system safety engineering, including accident analysis, hazard analysis, system design, safety in operations, and management of safety-critical systems. She applies the new techniques to real-world events including the friendly-fire loss of a U.S. Blackhawk helicopter in the first Gulf War; the Vioxx recall; the U.S. Navy SUBSAFE program; and the bacterial contamination of a public water supply in a Canadian town. Leveson's approach is relevant even beyond safety engineering, offering techniques for "reengineering" any large sociotechnical system to improve safety and manage risk.

STAMP is a new model of accident causation in complex systems. The traditional model that thinks of accidents as caused by component failures was adequate for the relatively simplyelectro-mechanical systems for which it was created, but it does not fit the more complex, software-intensive systems we are building today.  STAMP extends the old failure model of accident causation to include new types of accident causes.

To improve the success of our new space ventures, we need to go beyond the techniques and processes created decades ago for much simpler systems. They are not powerful enough for the increased complexity and new technology being incorporated into to-day’s spacecraft. Systems thinking will be needed to increase our probability of success in new missions. The techniques and ideas in Engineering a Safer World are a start, but we will need to improve and build on them for the future.