English

Developing a Quantitative Resiliency Approach

Systems and Control 2026-01-08 v1 Systems and Control

Abstract

Resiliency has garnered attention in the management of critical infrastructure as a metric of system performance, but there are significant roadblocks to its implementation in a realistic decision-making framework. Contrasted to risk and reliability, which have robust quantification approaches and undergird many regulatory approaches to system safety (e.g., "risk-informed decision-making"), resiliency is a diffuse, qualitatively-understood characteristic, often treated differently or distinctly. However, in the emerging context of highly-complex, highly-interdependent critical systems, the idea of reliability (as the probability of non-failure) may not be an appropriate metric of system health. As a result, focus is shifting towards resiliency-centered approaches that value the response to failure as much as the avoidance of failure. Supporting this approach requires a robustly-defined, quantitative understanding of resiliency. In this paper, we explore the foundations of reliability and resiliency engineering, and propose an approach to resiliency-informed decision-making bolstered by a quantitative understanding of resiliency.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2601.03452,
  title  = {Developing a Quantitative Resiliency Approach},
  author = {Vincent P. Paglioni and Graeme Troxell and Aaron Brown and Steve Conrad and Mazdak Arabi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2601.03452},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

18 pages