Risk Analysis : Socio-technical and Industrial Systems / Jean-Marie Flaus.

An overview of the methods used for risk analysis in a variety of industrial sectors, with a particular focus on the consideration of human aspects, this book provides a definition of all the fundamental notions associated with risks and risk management, as well as clearly placing the discipline of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Flaus, Jean-Marie
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Hoboken : Wiley, 2013.
Series:ISTE.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access

MARC

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245 1 0 |a Risk Analysis :  |b Socio-technical and Industrial Systems /  |c Jean-Marie Flaus. 
260 |a Hoboken :  |b Wiley,  |c 2013. 
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505 0 |a Cover; Title Page; Contents; 5.2. Degradation flow models; Foreword; Part 1. General Concepts And Principles; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1. What is risk management?; 1.2. Nature of risks; 1.3. Evolution of risk management; 1.4. Aims of this book; Chapter 2. Basic Notions; 2.1. Formalization of the notion of risk; 2.2. Hazard and sources of hazard; 2.3. Stakes and targets; 2.4. Vulnerability and resilience; 2.5. Undesirable events and scenarios; 2.6. Accidents and incidents; 2.7. Safety; 2.8. Likelihood, probability and frequency; 2.9. Severity and intensity; 2.10. Criticality. 
505 8 |a 2.11. Reducing risk: prevention, protection and barriers2.12. Risk analysis and risk management; 2.13. Inductive and deductive approaches; 2.14. Known risks and emerging risks; 2.15. Individual and societal risks; 2.16. Acceptable risk; 2.17. The ALARP and ALARA principles; 2.18. Risk maps; Chapter 3. Principles of Risk Analysis Methods; 3.1. Introduction; 3.2. Categories of targets and damages; 3.3. Classification of sources and undesirable events; 3.3.1. General points; 3.3.2. Case of occupational risks; 3.3.3. Case of major industrial risks; 3.4. Causes of technical origin. 
505 8 |a 3.4.1. Material failures3.4.2. Failures in software and information systems; 3.4.3. Failures linked to fluids and products; 3.5. Causes linked to the natural or manmade environment; 3.6. Human and organizational factors; 3.6.1. Reason's analysis of the human factor; 3.6.2. Tripod classification of organizational failures; Chapter 4. The Risk Management Process (ISO31000); 4.1. Presentation; 4.2. ISO31000 standard; 4.2.1. Basic principles; 4.2.2. The organizational framework; 4.3. Implementation: the risk management process; 4.3.1. Establishing the context; 4.3.2. Risk assessment. 
505 8 |a 4.3.3. Treatment of risk4.3.4. Communication and consultation; 4.3.5. Monitoring and review; 4.3.6. Risk evaluation methods; Part 2. Knowledge Representation; Chapter 5. Modeling Risk; 5.1. Introduction; 5.2.1. Source-target model; 5.2.2. Reason's model; 5.2.3. From source-target to causal modeling; 5.3. Causal modeling; 5.3.1. Fishbone cause-effect diagram; 5.3.2. Causal trees; 5.3.3. Fault tree; 5.3.4. Consequence or event trees; 5.3.5. Bow-tie diagram; 5.3.6. Scenario; 5.3.7. Bayesian networks; 5.4. Modeling dynamic aspects; 5.4.1. Markov model; 5.4.2. Dynamic fault tree; 5.5. Summary. 
505 8 |a Chapter 6. Measuring the Importance of a Risk6.1. Introduction; 6.2. Assessing likelihood; 6.2.1. Presentation; 6.2.2. Quantitative scale; 6.2.3. Qualitative scale; 6.2.4. Determining likelihood values; 6.3. Assessment of severity; 6.3.1. Presentation; 6.3.2. Quantitative indicators; 6.3.3. Qualitative indicators; 6.3.4. Determining a severity value; 6.4. Risk assessment; 6.4.1. Criticality; 6.4.2. Risk matrices; 6.4.3. Acceptability of a risk; 6.5. Application to the case of occupational risks; 6.5.1. Probability assessment; 6.5.2. Severity assessment; 6.5.3. Risk matrices. 
500 |a 6.6. Application to the case of industrial risks. 
520 |a An overview of the methods used for risk analysis in a variety of industrial sectors, with a particular focus on the consideration of human aspects, this book provides a definition of all the fundamental notions associated with risks and risk management, as well as clearly placing the discipline of risk analysis within the broader context of risk management processes. The author begins by presenting a certain number of basic concepts, followed by the general principle of risk analysis. He then moves on to examine the ISO31000 standard, which provides a specification for the implementat. 
588 0 |a Print version record. 
650 0 |a Technology  |x Risk assessment. 
650 0 |a Reliability (Engineering) 
650 7 |a PSYCHOLOGY  |x Social Psychology.  |2 bisacsh 
650 7 |a Reliability (Engineering)  |2 fast 
650 7 |a Technology  |x Risk assessment  |2 fast 
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