Highly automated driving functions pose challenges for the safety assurance due to their high complexity and the dynamic environment in which they operate. UL 4600, the safety standard for autonomous products, mandates the use of Safety Performance Indicators (SPIs) to continuously ensure the validity of safety cases by monitoring and taking action when violations are identified. Despite numerous examples of concrete SPIs available in the standard and companion literature, their contribution rationale for achieving safety is often left implicit. In this paper, we present our initial work towards an argument pattern for the use of SPIs to ensure validity of safety cases throughout the entire lifecycle of the system. Our aim is to make the implicit argument behind using SPIs explicit, and based on this, to analyze the situations that can undermine confidence in the chosen set of SPIs. To maintain the confidence in SPIs’ effectiveness, we propose an approach to continuously monitor their expected performance by using meta-SPIs.
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Highly automated driving functions pose challenges for the safety assurance due to their high complexity and the dynamic environment in which they operate. UL 4600, the safety standard for autonomous products, mandates the use of Safety Performance Indicators (SPIs) to continuously ensure the validity of safety cases by monitoring and taking action when violations are identified. Despite numerous examples of concrete SPIs available in the standard and companion literature, their contribution rat...
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