In the commercial aviation domain, large volumes of data are collected and analyzed on the failures and errors that result in infrequent incidents and accidents, but in the absence of data on behaviors that contribute to routine successful outcomes, safety management and system design decisions are based on a small sample of non- representative safety data. Analysis of aviation accident data suggests that human error is implicated in up to 80% of accidents, which has been used to justify future visions for aviation in which the roles of human operators are greatly diminished or eliminated in the interest of creating a safer aviation system. However, failure to fully consider the human contributions to successful system performance in civil ...
Accident statistics cite the flight crew as a causal factor in over 60% of large transport fatal acc...
A method for the study of human factors in the aviation environment is described. A conceptual frame...
Research results have shown that more than half of aviation, aerospace and aeronautics mishaps incid...
Research in human factors in the aircraft cockpit and a proposed program augmentation were reviewed....
There is a need to develop an effective methodology for generating comprehensive intervention strate...
This report identifies key human-performance-related issues associated with Next Generation Air Tran...
Recent technological advances have accelerated the development and application of increasingly auton...
There is a need for incident data relevant to the operation of civilian unmanned aircraft systems (U...
Human error is a significant contributing factor in a very high proportion of civil transport, gener...
There is a need for incident data relevant to the operation of civilian unmanned aircraft systems (U...
The Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) was instituted to aid the Federal Aviation Administratio...
The Aviation industry is rapidly evolving through increased automation on the flight deck, new air t...
Accident statistics cite the flight crew as a causal factor in over 60% of large transport aircraft ...
In May 1996, the FAA announced a new and innovative approach to reach a goal of "zero accidents," kn...
Efforts to improve operational safety often focus on preventing human error. But humans don't just m...
Accident statistics cite the flight crew as a causal factor in over 60% of large transport fatal acc...
A method for the study of human factors in the aviation environment is described. A conceptual frame...
Research results have shown that more than half of aviation, aerospace and aeronautics mishaps incid...
Research in human factors in the aircraft cockpit and a proposed program augmentation were reviewed....
There is a need to develop an effective methodology for generating comprehensive intervention strate...
This report identifies key human-performance-related issues associated with Next Generation Air Tran...
Recent technological advances have accelerated the development and application of increasingly auton...
There is a need for incident data relevant to the operation of civilian unmanned aircraft systems (U...
Human error is a significant contributing factor in a very high proportion of civil transport, gener...
There is a need for incident data relevant to the operation of civilian unmanned aircraft systems (U...
The Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) was instituted to aid the Federal Aviation Administratio...
The Aviation industry is rapidly evolving through increased automation on the flight deck, new air t...
Accident statistics cite the flight crew as a causal factor in over 60% of large transport aircraft ...
In May 1996, the FAA announced a new and innovative approach to reach a goal of "zero accidents," kn...
Efforts to improve operational safety often focus on preventing human error. But humans don't just m...
Accident statistics cite the flight crew as a causal factor in over 60% of large transport fatal acc...
A method for the study of human factors in the aviation environment is described. A conceptual frame...
Research results have shown that more than half of aviation, aerospace and aeronautics mishaps incid...