1st Edition

Human Factors and Aerospace Safety An International Journal: Volume 1

Edited By Don Harris, Helen Muir Copyright 2001

    This title was first published in 2001. There have been significant advances in the engineering design and production standards of the hardware and electronics in commercial aircraft. It is now uncommon for the principal (or sole) cause of an aircraft accident to be a component failure. Human error is now implicated in up to 80 per cent of all civil and military aviation accidents. The human being is now arguably the least reliable component left in the system. This basic premise forms the basis for this international journal. The journal focuses specifically on the human element in the aerospace system and its role in either causing accidents or incidents, or in promoting safety. The journal solicits contributions from both academic researchers and practitioners from industry. Human factors and safety are applied sciences and this is reflected in the tone and composition of the papers in the journal.

    PREFACE; A new international journal in aviation safety; POSITION PAPER; Reviewing the role of cockpit alerting systems; FORMAL PAPERS; The disembodiment of data in the analysis of human factors accidents; Applying Reason: the human factors analysis and classification system (HFACS); Quantity and quality of sleep during the record manned space flight of 438 days; CRITICAL INCIDENTS; Precautionary emergency evacuations: is it better to be safe and sorry?

    Biography

    Don Harris, Helen Muir