How Probabilistic Risk Assessment Can Mislead Terrorism Risk Analysts

被引:96
|
作者
Brown, Gerald G. [2 ]
Cox, Louis Anthony , Jr. [1 ]
机构
[1] Cox Associates, Denver, CO 80218 USA
[2] USN, Postgrad Sch, Dept Operat Res, Monterey, CA USA
关键词
Decision analysis; expert elicitation; terrorism risk analysis;
D O I
10.1111/j.1539-6924.2010.01492.x
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Traditional probabilistic risk assessment (PRA), of the type originally developed for engineered systems, is still proposed for terrorism risk analysis. We show that such PRA applications are unjustified in general. The capacity of terrorists to seek and use information and to actively research different attack options before deciding what to do raises unique features of terrorism risk assessment that are not adequately addressed by conventional PRA for natural and engineered systems-in part because decisions based on such PRA estimates do not adequately hedge against the different probabilities that attackers may eventually act upon. These probabilities may differ from the defender's (even if the defender's experts are thoroughly trained, well calibrated, unbiased probability assessors) because they may be conditioned on different information. We illustrate the fundamental differences between PRA and terrorism risk analysis, and suggest use of robust decision analysis for risk management when attackers may know more about some attack options than we do.
引用
收藏
页码:196 / 204
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Probabilistic terrorism risk assessment and risk acceptability for infrastructure protection
    Stewart, M.
    Netherton, M.
    Shi, Y.
    Grant, M.
    Mueller, J.
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING, 2012, 13 (01) : 1 - 17
  • [2] Probabilistic Risk Analysis and Terrorism Risk
    Ezell, Barry Charles
    Bennett, Steven P.
    von Winterfeldt, Detlof
    Sokolowski, John
    Collins, Andrew J.
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2010, 30 (04) : 575 - 589
  • [3] Reliability and Probabilistic Risk Assessment - How They Play Together
    Safie, Fayssal M.
    Stutts, Richard G.
    Huang, Zhaofeng
    2015 61ST ANNUAL RELIABILITY AND MAINTAINABILITY SYMPOSIUM (RAMS 2015), 2015,
  • [4] Breast cancer risk assessment: How risk models can "overdiagnose" risk
    Ozanne, Elissa
    Drohan, Brian
    Hughes, Kevin S.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2013, 31 (31)
  • [5] Risk analysis under attack: How risk science can address the legal, social, and reputational liabilities faced by risk analysts
    Thekdi, Shital A.
    Aven, Terje
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2023, 43 (06) : 1212 - 1221
  • [6] How can toxicogenomics inform risk assessment?
    Gundert-Remy, U
    Oberemm, A
    Onyon, L
    TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY, 2004, 197 (03) : 152 - 152
  • [7] THE INDIVIDUAL RISK ASSESSMENT OF TERRORISM
    Monahan, John
    PSYCHOLOGY PUBLIC POLICY AND LAW, 2012, 18 (02) : 167 - 205
  • [8] Probabilistic risk assessment
    Sielken, RL
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 211 : 179 - AGRO
  • [9] Risk assessment for intimate partner violence: how can the police assess risk?
    Kebbell, Mark Rhys
    PSYCHOLOGY CRIME & LAW, 2019, 25 (08) : 829 - 846
  • [10] Equity Analysts and the Market's Assessment of Risk
    Lui, Daphne
    Markov, Stanimir
    Tamayo, Ane
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2012, 50 (05) : 1287 - 1317