Challenging the mean time to failure: Measuring dependability as a mean failure cost
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
4-3-2009
Abstract
As a measure of system reliability, the mean time to failure falls short on many fronts: it ignores the variance in stakes among stakeholders; it fails to recognize the structure of complex specifications as the aggregate of overlapping requirements; it fails to recognize that different components of the specification carry different stakes, even for the same stakeholder; it fails to recognize that V& V actions have different impacts with respect to the different components of the specification. Similar metrics of security, such as MTTD (Mean Time to Detection) and MTTE (Mean Time to Exploitation) suffer from the same shortcomings. In this paper we advocate a measure of dependability that acknowledges the aggregate structure of complex system specifications, and takes into account variations by stakeholder, by specification components, and by V& V impact. © 2009 IEEE.
Identifier
78650760888 (Scopus)
ISBN
[9780769534503]
Publication Title
Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences Hicss
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1109/HICSS.2009.107
Recommended Citation
Mili, Ali and Sheldon, Frederick, "Challenging the mean time to failure: Measuring dependability as a mean failure cost" (2009). Faculty Publications. 12108.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/12108
