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Risk Acceptance Personality Paradigm: How We View What We Don't Know We Don't Know
Author(s) -
Allan Morris,
Michael Massie
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
infotech@aerospace
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2011-1455
Subject(s) - risk analysis (engineering) , event (particle physics) , computer science , identification (biology) , process (computing) , risk management , fault tree analysis , set (abstract data type) , need to know , factor analysis of information risk , hazard , personality psychology , project risk management , risk assessment , personality , engineering , psychology , project management , risk management information systems , information system , computer security , business , management information systems , social psychology , project management triangle , systems engineering , chemistry , biology , operating system , quantum mechanics , reliability engineering , programming language , botany , physics , organic chemistry , finance , electrical engineering
The purpose of integrated hazard analyses, probabilistic risk assessments, failure modes and effects analyses, fault trees and many other similar tools is to give managers of a program some idea of the risks associated with their program. All risk tools establish a set of undesired events and then try to evaluate the risk to the program by assessing the severity of the undesired event and the likelihood of that event occurring. Some tools provide qualitative results, some provide quantitative results and some do both. However, in the end the program manager and his/her team must decide which risks are acceptable and which are not. Even with a wide array of analysis tools available, risk acceptance is often a controversial and difficult decision making process. And yet, today's space exploration programs are moving toward more risk based design approaches. Thus, risk identification and good risk assessment is becoming even more vital to the engineering development process. This paper explores how known and unknown information influences risk-based decisions by looking at how the various parts of our personalities are affected by what they know and what they don't know. This paper then offers some criteria for consideration when making risk-based decisions.

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