7 research outputs found
Towards a taxonomy of process quality characteristics for assessment
Previous assessment of process quality have focused on process capability (i.e. the ability of a process to meet its stated goals). This paper proposes a taxonomy of alternative process quality characteristics based on intrinsic and extrinsic quality attributes. The ultimate goal of this taxonomy is to provide a framework to conduct process assessments using different process quality aspects. Such a framework would considerably broaden process quality perspectives beyond the primary measure of process capability. It would also allow practitioners to identify and evaluate relevant quality characteristics for processes based on specific contexts and implications. For the process assessment model developers, it offers a list of process quality characteristics that could be used to develop relevant process measurement frameworks
Situational factors in safety critical software development
The generic software development situational factors model has been
developed in order that environments within which software is developed can
be profiled and better understood. Situational context is a complex concern for
software developers, with a broad set of situational factors holding the potential
to affect any one software development project. Safety critical software
development is broadly similar to other kinds of software development /
engineering. But there are some additional or more dominant situational factors.
In this article we conduct a conceptual experiment to define safety critical
software development context using situational factors. Eleven such factors are
identified, with some of the factors requiring elaboration beyond the detail
presently available in the generic situational factors model. We firstly discuss
the appropriateness of the selected factors in generic safety critical software
development context. Thereafter we apply the selected factors to the medical
device and nuclear power domains. Selected situational factors can be used as a
high level profile and starting point for more detailed process and safety
assessment. Discussion about potential use cases and further development needs
is also presented