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Semantic Scholar · Article (Journal of Advanced Transportation)

Human Factors and Errors in Security Aviation: An Ergonomic Perspective

Published 2018-12-13 From Journal of Advanced Transportation 3 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at Semantic Scholar — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Journal of Advanced Transportation.

Abstract

Verbatim from Semantic Scholar. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

In a previous study we have identified the incidence of human factors and errors in the security screening process, concerning the Brazilian civil aviation. This finding led to the analysis of labor activity in the security checkpoint from an ergonomic perspective. The objective of this study was to evaluate the various labor conditions in the security checkpoints of Brazilian airports, in order to promote safer and higher performance of the AVSEC professionals, as well as the security equipment. For this purpose, we analyzed 14 of 60 questions of a self-observation questionnaire based on the theory of Generic Error–Modelling System (GEMS) and the four themes about human factors recommended by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). The questionnaire was responded to by 602 AVSEC professionals who worked in the security checkpoints of 18 Brazilian airports. Our analysis focused on the preponderant indexes of each question, taking into account the sequential arrangement in which the questions were displaced in the questionnaire and the classification of human factors and errors.

Authors

  • Michelle S. F. Arcúrio
  • E. S. Nakamura
  • Talita Armborst

Keywords

  • Engineering
  • Environmental Science

Citation: Michelle S. F. Arcúrio, E. S. Nakamura, Talita Armborst (2018). Human Factors and Errors in Security Aviation: An Ergonomic Perspective. Journal of Advanced Transportation. Semantic Scholar ID d0b390b71062f1d906802e93c558d35ec5960727. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/5173253 ↗