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Human Error The James Reason Model AST 425 AST 425 Dr. Barnhart.

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Presentation on theme: "Human Error The James Reason Model AST 425 AST 425 Dr. Barnhart."— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Error The James Reason Model AST 425 AST 425 Dr. Barnhart

2 Human Error  Human Error study is still in its infancy- much we still don’t understand  Human error in technology breakdown has increased fourfold in 30 years- consequences are increasingly dire

3 Definitions l Accident or Event Trajectory l Defenses, Barriers, and Safeguards- vary from few to many- from heavily defended to lightly l Unsafe acts- errors and violations l Latent failure- On the “Blunt End” l Active Failure- On the “Sharp”end l Local Trigger- Trips the Event l Event- Complete Penetration of a trajectory- have varying natures from all active (possibly Egypt Air 990 to all latent Columbia- 1 st shuttle disaster)

4 Error The term “human error” as used herein is composed of two components: -Error Factors- unintended - Violations- intentional

5 Errors  True errors occur within the mind of an individual and derive mainly from informational problems (forgetting, inattention, incomplete knowledge).

6 Violations  Violations- occur within a social context and are largely motivational problems such as poor morale, failure to reward compliance and/or sanction Non-compliance

7 Individual or Collective errors?  The issue of whether accidents are individually caused or collectively caused revolves around three dimensions:  Moral  Scientific  Practical

8 Moral Issue- much to be gained  Easier to pin legal responsibility on individuals- more direct connection  Issue compounded by professionals willing to accept responsibility- (captain etc.)  Most people highly value personal autonomy- “they should have known better”  We assume big failures result from big mistakes rather than several small ones  Emotional satisfaction in blaming someone

9 The Scientific Dimension- do we stop with people directly involved or go on back?  Why stop at organizational roots? Why not go back to the beginning of creation?  Answer should be practical- go back so far as to be able to change organizational behavior  Peculiar nature of accidents- initially appear to be the convergence of many failures but we would see the same in any organization frozen in time- why then are failures rare?

10 What then about the practical?  Moral issue- favors individual approach  Scientific issue- undecided  Answer here depends on two factors:  can latent factors be identified and stopped prior to an accident?  The degree to which improvements can better equip the organization to deal with local failures

11 Categories of errors and violations  Errors and violations can be categorized into three areas: –Skill based –Rule based –Knowledge based

12 Errors  Basically there are three types of skill based errors: –Attentional slips- failure to monitor progress of routine actions at some critical point –Memory lapses- forgetfulness (most common) –Perceptual error- misrecognition of some object; we see what we expect to see –Most slips and lapses have minimal consequences; responding “fine” to “hello” etc. but on the flight deck they can be dire!

13 Rule Based Mistakes  Two types: –Misapplication of good rules- braking to avoid a deer on an icy road; we humans tend to apply solutions to familiar problems on the basis of largely automatic pattern matching –Application of bad rules- learning shortcuts and cutting corners- usually circumstances are forgiving and you “get by with it”

14 Knowledge based mistakes  Due to Limited capacity of working memory  Incomplete mental models of the problem  Thinking on one’s feet- confirmation bias- bending the facts to fit a hasty conclusion, over-confidence, similarity bias, and frequency bias

15 Skill-based violations  Corner cutting promoted by a largely indifferent environment

16 Rule-based violations  More deliberate than skill based violations

17 Knowledge based violations  Novel circumstance- no specified procedure  Trainers and procedure writers can only address the foreseeable  Usually involve the unexpected occurrence of a rare but trained for situation or an unlikely combination of individually familiar circumstances

18 To Finish Defining Error  Cicero stated- “To err is human”  Accidents result from a failure of the risk management system to absorb the consequences of these errors (unsafe acts)  Human error is stubborn; sophisticated discrete solutions to human error will likely lead to more sophisticated sources of error- we must be prepared to manage it

19 The End Questions?


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