The crash at Kerang: investigating systemic and psychological factors leading to unintentional non-compliance at rail level crossings
The crash at Kerang: investigating systemic and psychological factors leading to unintentional non-compliance at rail level crossings
In 2007 a loaded semi-trailer truck struck a passenger train on a railway level crossing in Northern Victoria, Australia, killing eleven train passengers. Although the incident was formally investigated, why the truck driver proceeded through the crossing in the presence of a train remains unexplained. This article uses two juxtaposed Human Factors approaches to provide insight into the contributory factors underlying the incident. A systems analysis framework is used to examine the rail level crossing system in which the incident occurred and an individual psychological schema theory account is used to examine the failures which led the truck driver to proceed through the crossing in the presence of a train. The findings suggest that the primary cause of the incident was a looked-but-failed-to-see error driven by a faulty activation of schema error, leading the truck driver to assume initially that the crossing was in fact in a non-activated state with no train present. Moreover, various system-wide factors that shaped the rail level crossing ‘system’ and thus the incident are identified.
rail level crossings, kerang, systems, schema, accident analysis
1278-1288
Salmon, Paul M.
8fcdacc0-31f9-4276-bd9e-8127db6c806e
Read, Gemma J.M.
b581e346-d10e-43d6-bf04-a765780d4fdd
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Lenne, Michael G.
71b4df51-e80d-46af-adec-1f3b619244d5
January 2013
Salmon, Paul M.
8fcdacc0-31f9-4276-bd9e-8127db6c806e
Read, Gemma J.M.
b581e346-d10e-43d6-bf04-a765780d4fdd
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Lenne, Michael G.
71b4df51-e80d-46af-adec-1f3b619244d5
Salmon, Paul M., Read, Gemma J.M., Stanton, Neville A. and Lenne, Michael G.
(2013)
The crash at Kerang: investigating systemic and psychological factors leading to unintentional non-compliance at rail level crossings.
Accident Analysis & Prevention, 50, .
(doi:10.1016/j.aap.2012.09.029).
(PMID:23122328)
Abstract
In 2007 a loaded semi-trailer truck struck a passenger train on a railway level crossing in Northern Victoria, Australia, killing eleven train passengers. Although the incident was formally investigated, why the truck driver proceeded through the crossing in the presence of a train remains unexplained. This article uses two juxtaposed Human Factors approaches to provide insight into the contributory factors underlying the incident. A systems analysis framework is used to examine the rail level crossing system in which the incident occurred and an individual psychological schema theory account is used to examine the failures which led the truck driver to proceed through the crossing in the presence of a train. The findings suggest that the primary cause of the incident was a looked-but-failed-to-see error driven by a faulty activation of schema error, leading the truck driver to assume initially that the crossing was in fact in a non-activated state with no train present. Moreover, various system-wide factors that shaped the rail level crossing ‘system’ and thus the incident are identified.
Other
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e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2012
Published date: January 2013
Keywords:
rail level crossings, kerang, systems, schema, accident analysis
Organisations:
Transportation Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 351463
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351463
ISSN: 0001-4575
PURE UUID: 83dead6c-06f4-4746-a234-3ed4a1c4cdbd
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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2013 10:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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Author:
Paul M. Salmon
Author:
Gemma J.M. Read
Author:
Michael G. Lenne
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