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NASA NTRS · Technical Memorandum (TM)
Analysis of Pilot Monitoring Skills and a Review of Training Effectiveness
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 Ames Research Center.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
The commercial aviation industry world-wide has identified a need for improved pilot monitoring and awareness (e.g., FAA, 2013, ICAO, 2016). More specifically, aviation safety data indicate that failures in pilots’ flight path management (FPM) monitoring and awareness have contributed to a range of undesired outcomes: accidents, major upsets, and non-compliance with air traffic control (ATC) guidance. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has further stated that these types of FPM failures are likely to worsen with the increasingly complex air traffic control systems and FPM concepts proposed for NextGen (https://www.faa. gov/nextgen/what_is_nextgen/) operations (e.g., see Hah et al., 2017). Adding to this complexity is the introduction of increasingly automated aircraft systems that can increase monitoring burdens. One potential mitigation for this situation is to enhance pilot training for effective monitoring. NASA Ames Research Center was asked to identify and evaluate training approaches that have the potential to enhance pilots’ ability to effectively monitor for FPM (with the result of improved awareness). The focus of this work is to identify, develop or validate training guidance to improve pilot monitoring/awareness regarding FPM and mitigate the recent trend of accidents and incidents, especially loss of control (LOC) events. The result of this work should be input for improved industry standards and FAA guidance to reduce the risk of incidents and accidents due to inadequate pilot monitoring/awareness. This is the first of three reports that were developed for this project.
Authors
- Randall J Mumaw San Jose State University
- Dorrit Billman Ames Research Center
- Michael S Feary Ames Research Center
Keywords
- aviation human factors
- flight path management
- pilot monitoring
- training
- situation awareness
- loss of control accidents
Citation: Randall J Mumaw, Dorrit Billman, Michael S Feary (2021). Analysis of Pilot Monitoring Skills and a Review of Training Effectiveness. Ames Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20210000047. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20210000047 ↗