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NASA NTRS · Conference Paper
Correlating Computed and Flight Instructor Assessments of Straight-In Landing Approaches by Novice Pilots on a Flight Simulator
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 Armstrong Flight Research Center.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
The rising cost of flight training and the low cost of powerful computers have resulted in increasing use of PC-based flight simulators. This has prompted FAA standards regulating such use and allowing aspects of training on simulators meeting these standards to be substituted for flight time. However, the FAA regulations require an authorized flight instructor as part of the training environment. Thus, while costs associated with flight time have been reduced, the cost associated with the need for a flight instructor still remains. The obvious area of research, therefore, has been to develop intelligent simulators. However, the two main challenges of such attempts have been training strategies and assessment. The research reported in this paper was conducted to evaluate various performance metrics of a straight-in landing approach by 33 novice pilots flying a light single engine aircraft simulation. These metrics were compared to assessments of these flights by two flight instructors to establish a correlation between the two techniques in an attempt to determine a composite performance metric for this flight maneuver.
Authors
- Heath, Bruce E. Tuskegee Univ.
- Khan, M. Javed Tuskegee Univ.
- Rossi, Marcia Tuskegee Univ.
- Ali, Syed Firasat Tuskegee Univ.
Citation: Heath, Bruce E., Khan, M. Javed, Rossi, Marcia , et al. (2019). Correlating Computed and Flight Instructor Assessments of Straight-In Landing Approaches by Novice Pilots on a Flight Simulator. Armstrong Flight Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20070025131. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20070025131 ↗