default search action
13th SSS 2005: Southampton, UK
- Felix Redmill, Tom Anderson:
Constituents of Modern System-safety Thinking - Proceedings of the Thirteenth Safety-critical Systems Symposium, Southampton, UK, February 8-10, 2005. Springer 2005, ISBN 978-1-85233-952-4
Part 1 / Independent Safety Assessment
- David H. Smith:
The IEE/BCS Independent Safety Assurance Working Group. 3-19 - Jane Fenn, Brian Jepson:
Putting Trust into Safety Arguments. 21-35 - Peter K. D. Froome:
Independent Safety Assessment of Safety Arguments. 37-47
Part 2 / Safety and Security
- Ron Pierce, Herman Baret:
Structuring a Safety Case for an Air Traffic Control Operations Room. 51-64 - Samantha Lautieri, David Cooper, David Jackson:
SafSec: Commonalities Between Safety and Security Assurance. 65-75
Part 3 / Accident Investigation
- Kevin Payne:
Learning from a Train Derailment. 79-92 - Knut Rygh:
Accident Investigations - Meeting the challenge of new technology - Established methods challenged by uncertain safety concepts and failure behaviour in new technology. 93-108
Part 4 / Risk and its Tolerability
- Mark George:
Identification of Time At Risk Periods of Significance to ALARP Justifications. 111-127 - Michael J. Prince:
Developing and Using Risk Matrices. 129-145
Part 5 / Achieving and Arguing the Safety of Modular Systems
- Mark Nicholson:
Health Monitoring for Reconfigurable Integrated Control Systems. 149-162 - Graham Jolliffe, Mark Nicholson:
Exploring the Possibilities Towards a Preliminary Safety Case for IMA Blueprints. 163-181 - James Blow, Andrew Cox, Paul Liddell:
Modular Certification of Integrated Modular Systems. 183-192
Part 6 / Technologies for Dependability
- Gordon D. Baxter, Juliana Küster Filipe, Angela Miguel, Kenneth Tan:
The Effects of Timing and Collaboration on Dependability in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. 195-210 - Kelvin Nilsen, Adrian Larkham:
Applying Java™ Technologies to Mission-Critical and Safety-Critical Development. 211-223
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.