Pilot error versus sociotechnical systems failure: a distributed situation awareness analysis of Air France 447
Pilot error versus sociotechnical systems failure: a distributed situation awareness analysis of Air France 447
The Air France 447 crash occurred in 2009 when an Airbus A330 stalled and fell into the Atlantic Ocean, killing all on board. Following a major investigation, it was concluded that the incident resulted from a series of events that began when the autopilot disconnected after the aircraft's Pitot tubes froze in an adverse weather system. The findings place scrutiny on the aircrew's subsequent lack of awareness of what was going on and of what procedure was required, and their failure to control the aircraft. This article argues that this is inappropriate, instead offering a systems level view that can be used to demonstrate how systems, not individuals, lose situation awareness. This is demonstrated via a distributed situation awareness-based description of the events preceding the crash. The findings demonstrate that it was the sociotechnical system comprising aircrew, cockpit and aeroplane systems that lost situation awareness, rather than the aircrew alone.
air france 447, distributed situation awareness, aviation, accident analysis
64-79
Salmon, P.M.
e96abc65-12e8-4c75-8c1c-1cb986e0492f
Walker, G.H.
79e57e9e-7e21-4d38-8267-5fb68fa3469b
Stanton, N.A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
2016
Salmon, P.M.
e96abc65-12e8-4c75-8c1c-1cb986e0492f
Walker, G.H.
79e57e9e-7e21-4d38-8267-5fb68fa3469b
Stanton, N.A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Salmon, P.M., Walker, G.H. and Stanton, N.A.
(2016)
Pilot error versus sociotechnical systems failure: a distributed situation awareness analysis of Air France 447.
[in special issue: Distributed Situation Awareness]
Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 17 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/1463922X.2015.1106618).
Abstract
The Air France 447 crash occurred in 2009 when an Airbus A330 stalled and fell into the Atlantic Ocean, killing all on board. Following a major investigation, it was concluded that the incident resulted from a series of events that began when the autopilot disconnected after the aircraft's Pitot tubes froze in an adverse weather system. The findings place scrutiny on the aircrew's subsequent lack of awareness of what was going on and of what procedure was required, and their failure to control the aircraft. This article argues that this is inappropriate, instead offering a systems level view that can be used to demonstrate how systems, not individuals, lose situation awareness. This is demonstrated via a distributed situation awareness-based description of the events preceding the crash. The findings demonstrate that it was the sociotechnical system comprising aircrew, cockpit and aeroplane systems that lost situation awareness, rather than the aircrew alone.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 November 2015
Published date: 2016
Keywords:
air france 447, distributed situation awareness, aviation, accident analysis
Organisations:
Transportation Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 388111
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388111
ISSN: 1464-536X
PURE UUID: 4fa3d576-fecf-4751-9fa5-09e198fefde4
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Date deposited: 19 Feb 2016 14:04
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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Author:
P.M. Salmon
Author:
G.H. Walker
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