PPRuNe Forums

PPRuNe Forums (https://www.pprune.org/)
-   Tech Log (https://www.pprune.org/tech-log-15/)
-   -   Dissertation advice required! (https://www.pprune.org/tech-log/344511-dissertation-advice-required.html)

OverRun 5th Nov 2008 05:18


'Health issues of air travel'
RL DEHART - Annual review of public health, 2003
... There has been a significant increase in air rage on board aircraft, which poses a threat to flight safety and a fear of harm to passengers and crew. ...

'Road rage, air rage, and now ‘desk rage.’
J Daw - Monitor on Psychology, 2001

'Air Rage: The Underestimated Safety Risk'
A Dahlberg - 2001 - Ashgate

'Air Rage: An Issue of Aviation Security and Safety'
AIR LINE PILOT, 1999 - AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION

'Air Rage: Crisis in the Skies'
AR Thomas - 2001 - Prometheus Books

'Causes and consequences of air rage in Canada: cases in newspapers.'
RG Smart, RE Mann - Can J Public Health, 2003 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

'Air Rage: An Emerging Challenge for the Airline Industry'
P Barron, I Campus. Asia Pacific Journal of Transport, 2002

'Alcohol-Related Air Rage: From Damage Control to Primary Prevention'
L Anglin, P Neves, N Giesbrecht, M Kobus-Matthews - The Journal of Primary Prevention, 2003 – Springer ... 23, No. 3, Spring 2003

'Increasing incidence of air rage is both an aviation security and safety issue'
PT Reiss - International Civil Aviation Organisation Journal, 1998

'Responding to Medical Events during Commercial Airline Flights'
MA Gendreau, C DeJohn - New England Journal of Medicine, 2002
... The incidence of disruptive behavior in an aircraft passenger, or "air rage," is on the rise and places flight crew and passengers at high risk for injury. ...

Re-read my earlier posts carefully. Especially the bit about literature review. The above is just page 1 of gs

MikeyWings 5th Nov 2008 15:10

Sorry I've only just got round to this but thanks very much to everyone who's offered their thoughts, it really is appreciated.

Soaring steph, sounds like an interesting topic you have there. OverRun has given some great advice on this thread, so I'm sure reading through that will help you. The thing I've found particularly useful for info/references etc is my University's "e-library" where you can access articles, journals, papers and the like online, all free of charge (the Uni' pays thousands to subscribe to all the stuff on there). If your University has a similar system, and I believe most do, then I'd point you in that direction. Best of luck with it!

Meanwhile, for anyone who's interested, here's an update as to where I'm at... Having looked into the pilot vs automation authority issue, I've chosen to do my project on this and am currently conducting my literature review. I'm finding many issues arising within this argument, such as the loss of manual skills, situational awareness, vigilance, increased complacency (or conversely, distrust in automated systems, largely depending on their operational reliability), the shift from active information processing to passive information receiving, changes in the amount or type of feedback provided to the pilot etc etc, that all result from the introduction of automation in the cockpit. Due to the relatively short time period I have available to complete the work, I'm thinking about focussing in on just one or two of these issues to cover in detail, although which ones I've not yet decided.

Most studies come to the conclusion that a certain level of automation authority results in better overall performance of the human-machine system, compared with a system that gives the human total authority. However there is a point beyond which the share of authority goes too far in favour of the machine, resulting in degraded pilot performance when the automation breaks down.

One thing I have noticed is that most of these studies (at least the ones I have come across) have used students or other non-aviation-affiliated people as test subjects, and hence don't take into consideration the flight deck crew's perception of their loss of authority. It is notable from some of the comments made on this thread that a reduction in pilot authority is generally perceived as a negative thing. I would think most pilots won't be too happy at the thought of having to surrender some proportion of their command to a computer. Whether this has any effect in the real world is not clear, and something which might merit my attention.

At Salford University I am lucky in that I have access to their FNPT II sim and my project supervisor has said there'd be no problem with throwing some current pilots in there and running an experiment on them. I'm not sure as yet what experiment I could devise that would give meaningful data, and so am thinking of leaving that possibility until the second half of the project after xmas. In the meantime I am thinking along the lines of circulating questionnaires among pilots to try and get a feel for their perceptions of issues surrounding increased automation. Including a couple of accident case studies in my report that highlight some of the issues I outlined earlier is something else I'm considering too. Based on what I find from those things I'll look at whether I could come up with a flight sim experiment that would add value to the project.

I'll keep you updated as more progress is made; in the meantime if you have any more input, it'd be warmly received!

Cheers,

Mike.

soaring_steph 6th Nov 2008 18:44

I spent ages writing a long reply last night, basically thanking Otto Throttle and Overun for your help and details of where I am up to so far and my research list to date; and for some reason it has not published!! Not sure why :*.
When i get a chance after the weekend I will send a similar message but all in all, my point is: thank you!


All times are GMT. The time now is 16:09.


Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.