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Terminology 7 basic terms Risk Elements Risk Measures

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Presentation on theme: "Terminology 7 basic terms Risk Elements Risk Measures"— Presentation transcript:

1 Terminology 7 basic terms Risk Elements Risk Measures
Events – must have a loss Sources (Causes, Hazards, Threats, Capability, Intent, Targeting) don’t have a loss Consequences (Objectives, Assets) Controls (Treatments) Risk Measures Likelihood (Probability) Impact Risk

2 Riskion Wording Template

3 Tie it together with a Bowtie Diagram

4 Comprehensive and Scientific Approach to Risk Analysis and Management
Hierarchy of Sources Measurable and ‘Unmeasurable” Hierarchy of Objectives Quantitative and Qualitative Many to many to many relationships Inheritance and reciprocity

5 Comprehensive and Scientific Approach to Risk Analysis and Management
Matrix theory Principle Right Eigenvectors for computing ratio scale priorities from ordinal input Measurement theory Monte Carlo simulations Bayesian analysis Queueing theory Nonlinear integer optimization

6 Measuring/Estimating Likelihood of Events
Dependent on Sources? Not necessary but often convenient Understanding What is known or can be estimated e.g. accident given snow, rain, clear Especially if you are estimating for Miami vs. St. Paul Mn

7 Riskion: Sources Contribute To:

8 Riskion: Sources Contribute To:

9 Mutually Exclusive Both sources and events ‘should’ be mutually exclusive of one another Otherwise, their likelihoods could exceed 100% E.g. 2 sources for an event – Shouldn’t double count the intersection Riskion accounts for this by doing Monte Carlo Simulations as you will see soon

10 Measurements (estimates) from where?
Logic, History, Judgment Measurement properties Levels of Measurement Nominal Ordinal Interval Ratio Needs for ratio scale measures to produce risks measures that are scientifically meaningful Otherwise it is mathematically meaningless to multiply likelihood by impact when calculating risk Also will need to take sum products of source likelihoods and event likelihoods given sources to compute event likelihoods (will see this on bow-tie diagram shortly) Also will need to take sum products of event consequences on objectives and the priority of objectives to compute event impact (will see this on bow-tie diagram shortly)

11 Absolute and relative measures
Absolute represents likelihood of the source or event occurring Relative represents the likelihood compared to the likelihood of other sources or events Either adequate for many analyses Optimizing Allocation of budget to treatments Absolute better for some Communicating Deciding on treatments for a specific event on an event by event basis

12 Likelihood Measurements/Estimates How?
TAPPS In practice, how are source or event likelihoods measured or estimated? Identify processes, methods, tools for measuring/estimating the likelihood of risk events

13 Riskion Likelihood Measurement Methods
Rating Scale Most Common Pairwise with Given likelihood Direct Step Function Utility Curve Pairwise of Probabilities Pairwise Comparisons Bayesian Updating

14 Two aspects of measurement in Riskion
1) Defining what measurement method to use for each source and event PM does this in Structuring the model 2) Providing data and/or judgments This is a separate step and conducted after the model is ‘set up’ and measurement methods and roles defined It can be performed in ‘anytime’ or ‘teamtime’ modes It can be performed on smartphones, tables, or computers – Silverlight is not needed Participants do this in evaluating the model

15 Direct Measurement – if you know likelihoods of components from some database or simulations or …

16 Deriving Likelihoods from Pairwise Relative Comparisons
AHP math for deriving priorities from judgments The $25 Billion dollar Eigenvector AHP fundamental verbal scale ordinal in, ratio out? Redundancy and variety Measure of inconsistency Area Validation Examining/reducing inconsistency

17 SQUARE C CIRCLE A RECTANGLE E DIAMOND D TRIANGLE B
1 Equal Equal to Moderate 3 Moderate Moderate to Strong 5 Strong 6 Strong to Very Strong 7 Very Strong 8 Very Strong to Extreme 9 Extreme 1. Circle A is _________ times larger than Triangle B 2. Allocate $100 among the five shapes in proportion to the area of each shape. (Write the amount you would allocate inside each shape).

18 Area Validation Exercise
Purpose Verbal Less Accurate More ‘Appropriate’ Can enter judgments (computer or tablet or smartphone)

19 Measurement Options for Pairwise
Number of judgments N*(N-1)/2 for all pairs N-1+N-2 for 2 diagonals N-1 for 1 diagonal How many to show on a page Verbal or Graphical ** In order for verbal to produce ratio scale measures, adequate redundancy and variety are required. Otherwise use graphical/numerical

20 Pairwise with Known Likelihood
If know the likelihood of one source or event Derive relative likelihoods for a set with pairwise comparisons Normalize to the likelihood of the known source or event

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23 Pairwise of Probabilities

24 Pairwise of Probabilities -- rates
Queueing Theory Lambda is arrival rate –uniform, independent Time to next arrival – Erlang probability distribution Number of arrivals in unit of time – Poisson probability distribution From Excel: A process with an arrival rate of 1 per time interval has a .368 prob of no arrivals so a 63.2 prob of an arrival (event) See preceding slide

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26 Pairwise of Probabilities

27 Ratings – with ratio scale measures
Use pre-defined scales (ok, but not recommended in general) Define intensities Assign likelihoods (not recommended) Derive likelihoods Certain = 1 Example – do an assessment for a ‘Likert 1-5 scale’ for a specific source or event….

28 Utility curves

29 Step functions


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