Citation:
de la Vara J.L., Marín B., Ayora C., Giachetti G. (2017). An experimental evaluation of the understanding of safety compliance needs with models. In: Mayr H., Guizzardi G., Ma H., Pastor O. (eds) Conceptual Modeling. ER 2017. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 10650. Springer, Cham
ISBN:
978-3-319-69903-5
Sponsor:
The research leading to this paper has received funding from the AMASS project (H2020-ECSEL grant agreement no 692474; Spain’s MINECO ref. PCIN-2015-262) and the AMoDDI project (Ref. 11130583). We also thank the subjects that participated in the experiment.
Serie/No.:
Lecture Notes In Computer Science
Project:
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/692474/EU/AMASS Gobierno de España. PCIN-2015-262/AMASS
Keywords:
safety-critical system
,
safety standard
,
safety compliance needs
,
model
,
understanding
,
comprehension
,
experiment
Context: Most safety-critical systems have to fulfil compliance needs specified in safety standards. These needs can be difficult to understand from the text of the standards, and the use of conceptual models has been proposed as a solution. Goal: We aim to evContext: Most safety-critical systems have to fulfil compliance needs specified in safety standards. These needs can be difficult to understand from the text of the standards, and the use of conceptual models has been proposed as a solution. Goal: We aim to evaluate the understanding of safety compliance needs with models. Method: We have conducted an experiment to study the effectiveness, efficiency, and perceived benefits in understanding these needs, with text of safety standards and with UML object diagrams. Results: Sixteen Bachelor students participated in the experiment. Their average effectiveness in understanding compliance needs and their average efficiency were higher with models (17% and 15%, respectively). However, the difference is not statistically significant. The students found benefits in using models, but on average they are undecided about their ease of understanding. Conclusions: Although the results are not conclusive enough, they suggest that the use of models could improve the understanding of safety compliance needs.[+][-]
Description:
Proceedings of: 36th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling, ER 2017, Valencia, Spain, November 6–9, 2017