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Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL) is a risk classification scheme defined by the ISO 26262 - Functional Safety for Road Vehicles standard. This is an adaptation of the Safety Integrity Level (SIL) used in IEC 61508 for the automotive industry.
Automotive Safety Integrity Level refers to an abstract classification of inherent safety risk in an automotive system or elements of such a system. ASIL classifications are used within ISO 26262 to express the level of risk reduction required to prevent a specific hazard, with ASIL D representing the highest hazard level and ASIL A the lowest.
ASIL accuracy describes the maximum possible deviation of a measurement in a system in which a single point fault occurred before some diagnostic detects this fault. This concept applies to automotive systems designed under the ISO-26262 methodology for automotive functional safety, which defines Automotive Safety Integrity Levels (ASILs) to classify risks.
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Asil, Arabian horses who have pedigrees that can be traced to identifiable desert-bred horses from the Middle East; Asil chicken, a breed of chicken; Asil Kara, a synonym for the wine grape variety Băbească neagră; ASIL Lysi, a Cypriot football club; Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL), a risk classification scheme
Classification Image American Game fowl: light breed hardfeather: Ancona: light breed softfeather: Andalusian: light breed softfeather: Araucana: light breed softfeather: Asil: light breed hardfeather: Australian Game: heavy breed hardfeather: Australian Pit Game: heavy and light breed hardfeather: Australian Langshan: light breed softfeather ...
Participants in a meeting held on December 9, 1905, at the residence of Oscar S. Straus agreed to establish the ASIL. [2] [3] The first annual meeting of the association was in Washington, D.C., on April 19–20, 1907. [3] Elihu Root was the first president of the ASIL, serving in that position until his retirement in 1924.
Illustration of thirty-nine varieties of chicken (and one Guinea Fowl) . There are hundreds of chicken breeds in existence. [1] Domesticated for thousands of years, distinguishable breeds of chicken have been present since the combined factors of geographical isolation and selection for desired characteristics created regional types with distinct physical and behavioral traits passed on to ...