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Análisis de árbol de eventos asistido por simulación×Análisis de Árboles de Eventos Basado en Riesgo×
CampoDiseño experimentalDiseño experimental
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen1970s–1990s (formalized in probabilistic risk assessment practice)1975 (WASH-1400); risk-based integration formalized through 1980s–1990s PRA practice
Autor originalH.A. Watson (Bell Telephone Laboratories, ETA origins ~1961); Monte Carlo integration of ETA developed in nuclear/aerospace PRA community 1970s–1990sOriginated in nuclear industry (US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, WASH-1400 report); risk-based framing developed through probabilistic risk assessment practice
TipoProbabilistic risk and reliability assessment methodRisk and reliability analysis technique
Fuente seminalZio, E. (2009). Reliability engineering: Old problems and new challenges. Reliability Engineering and System Safety, 94(2), 125–141. DOI ↗Bedford, T., & Cooke, R. (2001). Probabilistic Risk Analysis: Foundations and Methods. Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 978-0521773201
AliasMonte Carlo ETA, stochastic event tree analysis, simulation-enhanced ETA, probabilistic event tree simulationRisk-based ETA, probabilistic event tree analysis, consequence-probability event tree, risk-informed ETA
Relacionados64
ResumenSimulation-assisted event tree analysis (ETA) extends classical event tree analysis by replacing fixed point-estimate branch probabilities with Monte Carlo or discrete-event simulation. This allows analysts to propagate uncertainty through every branch of the tree and obtain full probability distributions over accident sequences and system outcomes, yielding far richer risk insights than deterministic ETA alone.Risk-based event tree analysis is a forward-looking, inductive risk assessment technique that models the consequences of an initiating event by tracing binary success/failure branches through safety barriers, then weights each outcome path by its probability to produce quantified risk estimates. Widely applied in nuclear, chemical process, aviation, and infrastructure safety engineering, it sits at the heart of probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) and supports both design decisions and regulatory compliance.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Simulation-assisted event tree analysis · Risk-based event tree analysis. Recuperado el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare