DocumentCode
72955
Title
Culture and the Safety of Complex Automated Sociotechnical Systems
Author
Hodgson, Amanda ; Siemieniuch, Carys E. ; Hubbard, Ella-Mae
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electron., Electr. & Syst. Eng., Loughborough Univ., Loughborough, UK
Volume
43
Issue
6
fYear
2013
fDate
Nov. 2013
Firstpage
608
Lastpage
619
Abstract
Sociotechnical systems are becoming more complex and increasingly automated. Although human error is now widely viewed as playing a key role in the majority of system failures, there is an increasing recognition of the oversimplification inherent in such a view. This paper examines mismatches between the procedures and automation technologies of sociotechnical systems and their operators from the viewpoint of human culture and capabilities, with a particular focus on flight deck automation. Following an introduction to culture, its sources, its measurement, and its effects, this paper describes recent theories of thinking and decision making, and the influence of culture on decisions. Problems that are associated with automation are presented and it is concluded that current automation systems perform as very inadequate team members, leaving the human operators or crew unprepared when failure occurs or unusual events arise.
Keywords
cultural aspects; team working; automation technologies; complex automated sociotechnical systems; decision making theory; flight deck automation; human capability viewpoint; human culture viewpoint; thinking theory; Automation; Cultural differences; Safety; Sociotechnical systems; Automation confusion; national culture; safety; sociotechnical systems;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Human-Machine Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2291
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/THMS.2013.2285048
Filename
6650057
Link To Document