How and why pilots fixate even to the point of the crash.
Whatever you write about I would like to see the result.
It's normal to stare at whatever bad is happening. Target fixation has crashed more motorcycles then probably anything.
Those are excellent topics.Safety cultures. Normalization of deviance. Plan continuation bias.
(stolen from Orange Anchor - who sent me a bunch of recommendations for books to read on this topic. and I did.)
Yes, we all are familiar with the phenomena but I for one would like a clear clinical study on the mechanisms, etc. Ground traffic is different than being in the cockpit. In the cockpit, one is more confined and has a more narrowly defined scope of duties. However, how is that focus upset by task saturation and other unusual aspects of flight management? That would be a good paper.It's normal to stare at whatever bad is happening. Target fixation has crashed more motorcycles then probably anything.
Safety cultures. Normalization of deviance. Plan continuation bias.
(stolen from Orange Anchor - who sent me a bunch of recommendations for books to read on this topic. and I did.)
It seems to me a 'strong' initial perception would overcome that problematic 'decision tree'. Don't use a garden hose, use a fire hose. Don't dawdle with mild measures, go straight to the perception which allows an overwhelming force to resolve the problem. Yet that perception probably creates it's own set of problems, I guess.
"Compartmentalization" might be an interesting study!
How does this get started, how doMission mentality, and how cultures of non-compliance crop up is interesting.