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Multidisciplinary Design, Analysis, and Optimization Branch
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TOP STORIES
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Risk Assessment and Technology Portfolio Prioritization Using Logic-Evolved Decision Analysis
Methodologies for Aviation Security
The events of 9/11 led NASA to introduce a security aspect to its Aviation Safety Program with a portfolio of a
dozen advanced technologies designed to make flight more secure. A complete prioritization and management of the
portfolio was required to ensure maximizing investment payoffs in the highest promising technologies and to
perform a technical integration of the various NASA technologies with each other as well as within the overall
National Airspace System (NAS).
To accomplish this, a new approach was required. A complete vulnerability assessment had to be performed of the
NAS to formulate a baseline risk, then the NASA technologies could be applied to find the risk reduction
provided. The enormous task of performing a risk-based analysis of the NAS was best managed by using a
computational methodology called the Logic Evolved Decision (LED) analysis developed at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory for modeling the behavior of complex systems with respect to decision support applications. The LED
computational algorithm uses linked, formal logic models to represent the basic functions of a decision
analysis tool. This systems analysis capability incorporates fuzzy logic, approximate reasoning, possibility,
probability, multi-attribute scoring, and graph theory to construct these decision support models. LED is a
flexible, self-contained, comprehensive, and traceable decision support software tool for risk-based
prioritization and portfolio management across a broad spectrum of applications.
Using the LED tool, a comprehensive set of several million attack scenarios was developed using fault tree
analysis to define terrorist threats to aircraft, airports, and the airspace. Then a much smaller representative
spanning set of attacks were chosen and used to apply the technologies on to determine the effective risk
reduction. To find the effective risk reduction, factors such as the technology readiness levels, technical
development risks, implementation risks, cultural and certification issues, and cost/benefit had to be
considered. The power of using the LED methodology is the use of approximate reasoning in constructing
inference models to analyze each attack scenario. Through the use of expert elicitation for the attack
scenarios and inference models, NASA technologists, experts in all aspects of aviation operations and security,
and national security analysts could input their expertise to the threats, the security technologies, and
the impact of the technologies. From the application of these inference models to the attack scenarios,
a final risk could be found and compared to the baseline risks to determine an effective risk reduction.
These risk reductions were analyzed in a variety of ways. Primarily, they were looked at as each technology
was used in a "stand alone" operation, or coupled with one or more other technologies for increased risk
reduction.
The objective of these assessments was to provide a decision support tool that can be used to prioritize
NASA research in aviation security. This top-down analysis and modeling approach utilized the LED
methodologies and techniques to rank order the proposed NASA security research projects by using risk
reduction as the metric.
Glenn Author and Contact:
Kenneth L. Fisher, 216.433.5655, Kenneth.L.Fisher@nasa.gov
Programs/Projects:
Aviation Safety Program
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