Handling and updating uncertain information in bow-tie analysis |
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Authors: | Refaul FerdousFaisal Khan Rehan SadiqPaul Amyotte Brian Veitch |
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Affiliation: | a Faculty of Engineering & Applied Science, Memorial University, S.J. Caren Building, St. John’s, NL, Canada A1B 3X5 b Okanagan School of Engineering, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC, Canada, V1V 1V7 c Department of Chemical Engineering, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada B3J 2X4 |
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Abstract: | Bow-tie analysis is a fairly new concept in risk assessment that can describe the relationships among different risk control parameters, such as causes, hazards and consequences to mitigate the likelihood of occurrence of unwanted events in an industrial system. It also facilitates the performance of quantitative risk analysis for an unwanted event providing a detailed investigation starting from basic causes to final consequences. The credibility of quantitative evaluation of the bow-tie is still a major concern since uncertainty, due to limited or missing data, often restricts the performance of analysis. The utilization of expert knowledge often provides an alternative for such a situation. However, it comes at the cost of possible uncertainties related to incompleteness (partial ignorance), imprecision (subjectivity), and lack of consensus (if multiple expert judgments are used). Further, if the bow-tie analysis is not flexible enough to incorporate new knowledge or evidence, it may undermine the purpose of risk assessment.Fuzzy set and evidence theory are capable of characterizing the uncertainty associated with expert knowledge. To minimize the overall uncertainty, fusing the knowledge of multiple experts and updating prior knowledge with new evidence are equally important in addition to addressing the uncertainties in the knowledge. This paper proposes a methodology to characterize the uncertainties, aggregate knowledge and update prior knowledge or evidence, if new data become available for the bow-tie analysis. A case study comprising a bow-tie for a typical offshore process facility has also been developed to describe the utility of this methodology in an industrial environment. |
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Keywords: | Uncertainty Bow-tie Expert knowledge Updating Fuzzy sets and evidence theory Risk assessment |
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