In 2017, a team of subject matter experts from across the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratory developed a framework to assess and compare monitoring systems implemented to support treaty verification. Drawing on principles and techniques from multi-criteria decision making, the project team developed a set of evaluation criteria to serve as a decision support tool to understand and evaluate competing options. These criteria, which focus on monitoring systems designed to maintain chain of custody, were developed to be unambiguous, independent from each other, collectively exhaustive, measurable (whether this is quantitative or by a systematic subjective evaluation) and to help identify and prioritize factors of importance considering the perspectives of both a Host and Monitor. When used in the evaluation of options, criteria help to create a consistent framework that can assist in selecting the optimal solution among a set of competing alternatives.
Revised: November 1, 2019 |
Published: June 1, 2018
Citation
Waterworth A.M., and J.M. Benz. 2018.CRITERIA FOR COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS OF TREATY VERIFICATION MONITORING SYSTEMS. In 47th Annual Meeting of the Western Decision Sciences Institute (WDSI 2018), April 3-6, 2018, Kaua'i, Hawaii. Houston, Texas:Western Decision Sciences Institute (WDSI).PNNL-SA-132024.