Fratricide: defective decision making
Fratricide: defective decision making
Motivation – to explore the applicability of a Human Factors methodology for the investigation of fratricide. Research approach – The EAST methodology was used to analyse an incident of fratricide and its ability to explore the Famous Five of Fratricide (F3) model was investigated.
Findings/Design – the analysis revealed that EAST was able to provide explicit discussion of the Famous Five of Fratricide (F3) models five causal factors of communication, cooperation, coordination, schemata and situation awareness.
Research limitations/Implications – the research explored a single case study and as such is couched at the initial phases of investigation.
Originality/Value – the analysis provides a contribution to the knowledge urrounding fratricide both with respect to the novel application of the EAST methodology to an incident of fratricide, and also the causal factors identified by EAST within the fratricide incident.
Take away message – the EAST methodology provides an innovative way of exploring causality in incidents of fratricide
370-377
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Rafferty, Laura A.
4b985278-d77a-4f99-a5db-d05f155683eb
Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
2009
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Rafferty, Laura A.
4b985278-d77a-4f99-a5db-d05f155683eb
Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
Stanton, Neville A., Rafferty, Laura A. and Walker, Guy H.
(2009)
Fratricide: defective decision making.
Proceedings of the 9th Bi-annual international conference on Naturalistic Decision Making, 9, .
Abstract
Motivation – to explore the applicability of a Human Factors methodology for the investigation of fratricide. Research approach – The EAST methodology was used to analyse an incident of fratricide and its ability to explore the Famous Five of Fratricide (F3) model was investigated.
Findings/Design – the analysis revealed that EAST was able to provide explicit discussion of the Famous Five of Fratricide (F3) models five causal factors of communication, cooperation, coordination, schemata and situation awareness.
Research limitations/Implications – the research explored a single case study and as such is couched at the initial phases of investigation.
Originality/Value – the analysis provides a contribution to the knowledge urrounding fratricide both with respect to the novel application of the EAST methodology to an incident of fratricide, and also the causal factors identified by EAST within the fratricide incident.
Take away message – the EAST methodology provides an innovative way of exploring causality in incidents of fratricide
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Published date: 2009
Organisations:
Transportation Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 368141
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/368141
PURE UUID: c720b2a0-9236-4dd0-908f-4f9e00411dba
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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2014 09:03
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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Contributors
Author:
Laura A. Rafferty
Author:
Guy H. Walker
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