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NASA NTRS · Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Assessing fatigue
Attribution
This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Legacy CDMS.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
Despite impressive advances in aircraft technology over the past several decades and an overall decline in the airline accident rate since the introduction of turbine-powered aircraft, flight crew performance problems continue to dominate air transport accident statistics. Researchers have offered many hypotheses to explain this finding, and interest in pilot fatigue has stimulated a large volume of laboratory research. Much of this work, however, is difficult to generalize and to apply to the real world of flight operations, and researchers disagree about the extent and operational significance of fatigue-related reductions in pilot performance. As a result, in 1980 Congress asked the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to undertake a comprehensive research program to assess whether fatigue-related problems are prevalent in long- and short-haul flying. The two major goals of this project are: (1) to assess the psychophysiological effects on pilot performance of flying various types of flight and duty cycles, and (2) to determine the operational significance to flight safety and efficiency of flying these flight and duty cycles.
Author
- Foushee, H. C. NASA Ames Research Center
Keywords
- NASA Discipline Space Human Factors
- NASA Program Space Medicine
- NASA Discipline Number 22-60
- NASA Center ARC
- Aerospace Medicine
- Fatigue/psychology
- Aircraft
- Task Performance and Analysis
- Workload
- Psychomotor Performance
- Human
- Work Schedule Tolerance/psychology
Citation: Foushee, H. C. (2011). Assessing fatigue. Legacy CDMS. NASA NTRS ID 20040090379. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20040090379 ↗