Abstract

Foreword. Preface. Introduction. Notes on Contributors. List of Acronyms. PART I INTRODUCTION TO OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT. 1 Risk management: a general view (Ron S. Kenett, Richard Pike and Yossi Raanan). 1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Definitions of risk. 1.3 Impact of risk. 1.4 Types of risk. 1.5 Enterprise risk management. 1.6 State of the art in enterprise risk management. 1.7 Summary. References. 2 Operational risk management: an overview (Yossi Raanan, Ron S. Kenett and Richard Pike). 2.1 Introduction. 2.2 Definitions of operational risk management. 2.3 Operational risk management techniques. 2.4 Operational risk statistical models. 2.5 Operational risk measurement techniques. 2.6 Summary. References. PART II DATA FOR OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT AND ITS HANDLING. 3 Ontology-based modelling and reasoning in operational risks (Christian Leibold, Hans-Ulrich Krieger and Marcus Spies). 3.1 Introduction. 3.2 Generic and axiomatic ontologies. 3.3 Domain-independent ontologies. 3.4 Standard reference ontologies. 3.5 Operational risk management. 3.6 Summary. References. 4 Semantic analysis of textual input (Horacio Saggion, Thierry Declerck and Kalina Bontcheva). 4.1 Introduction. 4.2 Information extraction. 4.3 The general architecture for text engineering. 4.4 Text analysis components. 4.5 Ontology support. 4.6 Ontology-based information extraction. 4.7 Evaluation. 4.8 Summary. References. 5 A case study of ETL for operational risks (Valerio Grossi and Andrea Romei). 5.1 Introduction. 5.2 ETL (Extract, Transform and Load). 5.3 Case study specification. 5.4 The ETL-based solution. 5.5 Summary. References. 6 Risk-based testing of web services (Xiaoying Bai and Ron S. Kenett). 6.1 Introduction. 6.2 Background. 6.3 Problem statement. 6.4 Risk assessment. 6.5 Risk-based adaptive group testing. 6.6 Evaluation. 6.7 Summary. References. PART III OPERATIONAL RISK ANALYTICS. 7 Scoring models for operational risks (Paolo Giudici). 7.1 Background. 7.2 Actuarial methods. 7.3 Scorecard models. 7.4 Integrated scorecard models. 7.5 Summary. References. 8 Bayesian merging and calibration for operational risks (Silvia Figini). 8.1 Introduction. 8.2 Methodological proposal. 8.3 Application. 8.4 Summary. References. 9 Measures of association applied to operational risks (Ron S. Kenett and Silvia Salini). 9.1 Introduction. 9.2 The arules R script library. 9.3 Some examples. 9.4 Summary. References. PART IV OPERATIONAL RISK APPLICATIONS AND INTEGRATION WITH OTHER DISCIPLINES. 10 Operational risk management beyond AMA: new ways to quantify non-recorded losses (Giorgio Aprile, Antonio Pippi and Stefano Visinoni). 10.1 Introduction. 10.2 Non-recorded losses in a banking context. 10.3 Methodology. 10.4 Performing the analysis: a case study. 10.5 Summary. References. 11 Combining operational risks in financial risk assessment scores (Michael Munsch, Silvia Rohe and Monika Jungemann-Dorner). 11.1 Interrelations between financial risk management and operational risk management. 11.2 Financial rating systems and scoring systems. 11.3 Data management for rating and scoring. 11.4 Use case: business retail ratings for assessment of probabilities of default. 11.5 Use case: quantitative financial ratings and prediction of fraud. 11.6 Use case: money laundering and identification of the beneficial owner. 11.7 Summary. References. 12 Intelligent regulatory compliance (Marcus Spies, Rolf Gubser and Markus Schacher). 12.1 Introduction to standards and specifications for business governance. 12.2 Specifications for implementing a framework for business governance. 12.3 Operational risk from a BMM/SBVR perspective. 12.4 Intelligent regulatory compliance based on BMM and SBVR. 12.5 Generalization: capturing essential concepts of operational risk in UML and BMM. 12.6 Summary. References. 13 Democratisation of enterprise risk management (Paolo Lombardi, Salvatore Piscuoglio, Ron S. Kenett, Yossi Raanan and Markus Lankinen). 13.1 Democratisation of advanced risk management services. 13.2 Semantic-based technologies and enterprise-wide risk management. 13.3 An enterprise-wide risk management vision. 13.4 Integrated risk self-assessment: a service to attract customers. 13.5 A real-life example in the telecommunications industry. 13.6 Summary. References. 14 Operational risks, quality, accidents and incidents (Ron S. Kenett and Yossi Raanan). 14.1 The convergence of risk and quality management. 14.2 Risks and the Taleb quadrants. 14.3 The quality ladder. 14.4 Risks, accidents and incidents. 14.5 Operational risks in the oil and gas industry. 14.6 Operational risks: data management, modelling and decision making. 14.7 Summary. References. Index.

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