Conservative Software Reliability Assessments Using Collections of Bayesian Inference Problems
By: Kizito Salako, Rabiu Tsoho Muhammad
Potential Business Impact:
Makes sure computer programs are safe to use.
When using Bayesian inference to support conservative software reliability assessments, it is useful to consider a collection of Bayesian inference problems, with the aim of determining the worst-case value (from this collection) for a posterior predictive probability that characterizes how reliable the software is. Using a Bernoulli process to model the occurrence of software failures, we explicitly determine (from collections of Bayesian inference problems) worst-case posterior predictive probabilities of the software operating without failure in the future. We deduce asymptotic properties of these conservative posterior probabilities and their priors, and illustrate how to use these results in assessments of safety-critical software. This work extends robust Bayesian inference results and so-called conservative Bayesian inference methods.
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