DocumentCode
2384136
Title
New century, same humanity on a collision course
Author
Nelms, Robert C.
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
42407
Lastpage
42413
Abstract
Having become recently immersed in the paradigms of nuclear power generation, especially as they relate to "human performance," the author is somewhat aghast at the current trend in thinking: "we have finally figured out how to operate our equipment without failure-now we\´re going to do the same with the human." Human beings have always been the same, and will always be the same. We make mistakes. Interestingly, "honest" mistakes are the ones that we can do something about-we can actually prevent them. It\´s not honest mistakes that are the problem. It\´s the "dishonest" ones that are truly at the root of everything that goes wrong. We all do things we know we shouldn\´t do, many times per day. We\´ve always been like this. We will always be like this. This paper, written by an outsider to the power generation industry, explores this reality, provides historical and practical evidence of its truth, and then draws some conclusions about how to approach these "human performance" problems.
Keywords
human factors; nuclear power stations; dishonest mistakes; honest mistakes; human performance; nuclear power generation; Coaxial components; Discussion forums; Human factors; NASA; Nuclear power generation; Pediatrics; Power generation; Space shuttles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human Factors and Power Plants, 2002. Proceedings of the 2002 IEEE 7th Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7450-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HFPP.2002.1042826
Filename
1042826
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