1 / 23

Open risk assessment Lecture 3: Assessment products and their relations

Mikko Pohjola KTL, Finland. Open risk assessment Lecture 3: Assessment products and their relations. Lecture contents. Assessment products Relations between assessment products Attributes of assessment products. General assessment framework. Assessment products.

shauna
Télécharger la présentation

Open risk assessment Lecture 3: Assessment products and their relations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mikko Pohjola KTL, Finland Open risk assessment Lecture 3: Assessment products and their relations

  2. Lecture contents • Assessment products • Relations between assessment products • Attributes of assessment products

  3. General assessment framework

  4. Assessment products • Produced by assessment processes • Intended to trigger their use process(es) • Formally structured information objects • Assessment, variable, class • Assessments and variables are hypotheses of a given state of being • Development through falsification of hypothesis • Classes are sets of structured information objects • All products are objects that develop in time • E.g. there is no such thing as a draft variable

  5. General assessment processes

  6. Assessment • Provides ”the answer to a certain specific need” • A collection of variables according to the specific need • Contains also assessment-specific information • Assessment-level analyses • Assessment-level conclusions • The implications of contextual factors are described on assessment-level • Example: Benefit-risk assessment on farmed salmon

  7. Assessment products • Variable • The basic building block of assessments • Description of reality within a defined scope • Scope defined by the specific need (for an assessment) • Other content independent of context given scope • Several different kinds of variables • Indicators, end-point variables, decision variables, key variables, … • Variables can belong to several assessments • Example: Benefit-risk assessment on farmed salmon

  8. Assessment products • Class • A practical (non-fundamental) kind of objects • Classes are collections of variables and assessments that share a certain property or properties • E.g. ”Class: Emission variables” or ”Class: Environmental health risk assessments” • General purpose of class is to describe shared properties (not to list objects with shared properties) • General information may be attributed to a class, and then utilised in objects belonging to the class • Classes are important in making information efficiently re-usable

  9. Lecture contents • Assessment products • Relations between assessment products • Internal structure of assessment products

  10. Relations between assessment products • Between levels of complexity • Context – assessment – variable • Causality between variables • Membership of classes

  11. Levels of complexity • Assessments belong to context, variables belong to assessments • Context determines assessment (scope), assessment determines variable (scope) • Variables are, however, independent objects, given their scope • A variable can belong to several assessments

  12. Causality between variables • Causal relations are defined within variables • Variable/definition/causality • Representation also in form of causal diagrams • Causal diagrams are a practical means of presenting assessments as collections of variables and their relations: • Assessment endpoints • Indicators • Decision variables • Other variables

  13. Causal diagram

  14. Membership of class • Both assessments and variables can also belong to classes • A loose, non-ontological, relation for practical management of information objects • Membership to a particular class can be based on any inclusion criterion

  15. Relations between assessment products

  16. Lecture contents • Assessment products • Relations between assessment products • Internal structure of assessment products

  17. Attributes of assessment products • All objects have the same attribute structure: • Name: identifier • Scope: a question to answer • Definition: the basis for an answer • Result: the answer to the question

  18. Attributes of assessment products • Sub-attributes vary from object type to another • Attributes of different object types contain different kinds of information • The primary purpose varies between object types • Assessments and variables are descriptions of a hypothesis about a state of being and the process that leads/led to that hypothesis

  19. Variable • Name - identifier • Scope – formulation of a question to answer • Definition – how the answer is derived • Causality • Data • Formula • Unit • Result – answer to the question (a hypothesis) • Quantitative whenever possible • Example: Benefit-risk assessment on farmed salmon

  20. Assessment

  21. Assessment • The implications of context are described within assessment • Scope -> definition -> result • Significant part of assessment content is described within the variables belonging to it • Assessment description also contains case-specific assessment-level information • Example: Benefit-risk assessment on farmed salmon

  22. Class • Name – identifier • Scope –what objects belong to this class? • Definition – description of a shared property or properties • described in a form directly quotable from other objects • Result – list of member objects

  23. Summary • Three product types: • Assessment, variable, class • Three types of relations: • belonging/defining, causality, membership • Universal attributes: • name, scope, definition, result

More Related