1st Edition

Aviation Resource Management Proceedings of the Fourth Australian Aviation Psychology Symposium Volume 1

Edited By Brent. J Hayward, Andrew R Lowe Copyright 2000

    This title was first published in 2000. This is volume one of a two-volume set which presents the reader with strategies for the contributions of psychology and human factors to the safe and effective functioning of aviation organizations and systems.Together, the volumes comprise the edited contributions to the Fourth Australian Aviation Psychology Symposium. The chapters within are orientated towards presenting and developing practical solutions for the present and future challenges facing the aviation industry. Each volume covers areas of vital and enduring importance in the complex aviation system. Volume one includes aviation safety, crew resource management, the aircraft cabin, cockpit automation, safety investigation, fatigue and stress, and applied human factors in training.

    1: Aviation Safety; 1: Proactive safety culture: Do we need human factors?; 2: Organisational learning in the aviation business; 3: Safety culture and human error in the aviation industry: In search of perfection; 4: A multi-layer model for incident reporting and analysis systems; 5: An organisational approach to human factors; 6: Reducing accidents among general aviation pilots through a national aviation safety program; 7: Human factors and systems safety training into the new millennium: Co-operation or confrontation?; 8: Luck: The final frontier in safety?; 9: A study of the safety of flight in degraded visual conditions; 10: Safety management in an integrated flying school; 2: Crew Resource Management; 11: Safety and error management: The role of crew resource management; 12: Western expatriates in an eastern organisation: A Malaysia Airlines experience; 13: The trouble with culture; 14: Creating and implementing a human factors safety culture in Central America; 15: The road to company CRM at Ansett Australia; 16: Human factors assessment: Pedantic semantics or the write stuff?; 17: Traditional flight crew and CRM training: Is it really safe?; 18: “Captain, what the…?”; 19: CRM in general aviation for single-pilot operations; 20: Crew concepts in the air ambulance service of Norway; 21: Enhancing the role of helicopter crewmen during single-pilot EMS operations; 3: The Aircraft Cabin; 22: Safety issues in cockpit/cabin crew communication; 23: Service, teamwork and flight safety; 24: Flight attendants’job performance and job satisfaction: The role of work-family conflict, supervisor support and job involvement; 25: Working conditions of Brazilian flight attendants: A qualitative approach; 4: Cockpit Automation; 26: Human factors in advanced technology aircraft; 27: Differences training for the glass cockpit: A comparison of pilot attitudes to two approaches; 28: Lessons from new technology; 29: Technology for instruction and learning: Support versus solution?; 30: Heads down for a ‘heads-up’: Cockpit procedures for automated flight; 31: The hidden losses in cockpit automation; 5: Safety Investigation; 32: From Dry den to Winnipeg – and all points beyond; 33: Strategic accident prevention with applied human factors theories; 34: Theoretical taxonomies of cognitive human failure: A comparison between fixed, rotary-wing, and glider aircraft; 35: Pilot error: Cognitive failure analysis; 6: Fatigue and Stress; 36: Fatigue management in aviation: Similarities between the effects of fatigue and alcohol on performance impairment; 37: Fatigue in the air activity The pilot’s perception; 38: Devising a model for effective stress management in a leading South African airline company; 39: The physiological factor; 7: Developmental Workshop Reports; 40: Applied human factors training workshop report; 41: Aviation safety investigation workshop report; 42: Cabin safety workshop report

    Biography

    Brent. J Hayward, Andrew R Lowe