Title :
Pilot error in automated systems shown by altitude deviation reports
Author :
Ritter, Richard D.
Author_Institution :
Tech. Field Office, NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
Abstract :
Over 8000 altitude deviations are reported to NASA´s Aviation Safety Reporting System each year. This is almost one an hour. The narratives of pilot incidents relate how errors made in the automation-assisted altitude change task are caused by the difficulty pilots are having interacting with automatic systems. This paper discusses the impact of increased automation in glass-cockpit airliners on the altitude deviations reported by pilots. By observing the way information is processed by the cockpit system, the author suggests that the philosophies of design and training need to change in order to facilitate, not debilitate, the aircrew
Keywords :
aerospace computer control; aircraft control; aircraft instrumentation; human factors; safety; training; Aviation Safety Reporting System; NASA; aircrew; altitude deviations; automation-assisted altitude change; errors; glass-cockpit airliners; pilot error; pilot incidents; training; Aerospace safety; Air safety; Aircraft; Automatic speech recognition; Automation; FAA; Humans; Immune system; NASA; Stress;
Conference_Titel :
Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 1993. 12th DASC., AIAA/IEEE
Conference_Location :
Fort Worth, TX
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1343-7
DOI :
10.1109/DASC.1993.283570