Graphical vs. Tabular Notations for Risk Models: On the Role of Textual Labels

Conference Paper (2017)
Author(s)

Katsiaryna Labunets (TU Delft - Technology, Policy and Management)

Fabio Massacci (UniversitĂ  degli Studi di Trento)

Alessandra Tedeschi (Deep Blue srl)

Research Group
Safety and Security Science
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/ESEM.2017.40 Final published version
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Related content
Research Group
Safety and Security Science
Pages (from-to)
267-276
Event
ACM/IEEE International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement, ESEM 2017 (2017-11-09 - 2017-11-10), Toronto, Canada
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Abstract

Security risk assessment methods in industry mostly use a tabular notation to represent the assessment results whilst academic works advocate graphical methods. Experiments with MSc students showed that the tabular notation is better than an iconic graphical notation for the comprehension of security risks. [Aim] We investigate whether the availability of textual labels and terse UML-style notation could improve comprehensibility. [Method] We report the results of an online comprehensibility experiment involving 61 professionals with an average of 9 years of working experience, in which we compared the ability to comprehend security risk assessments represented in tabular, UML-style with textual labels, and iconic graphical modeling notations. [Results] Tabular notation are still the most comprehensible notion in both recall and precision. However, the presence of textual labels does improve the precision and recall of participants over iconic graphical models. [Conclusion] Tabular representation better supports extraction of correct information of both simple and complex comprehensibility questions about security risks than the graphical notation but textual labels help.

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