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Despite growing concern with the effects of concurrent task demands
on human performance, and research demonstrating that these demands
are associated with vulnerability to error, so far there has been
only limited research into the nature and range of concurrent task
demands in real-world settings. This book presents a set of NASA
studies that characterize the nature of concurrent task demands
confronting airline flight crews in routine operations, as opposed
to emergency situations. The authors analyze these demands in light
of what is known about cognitive processes, particularly those of
attention and memory, with the focus upon inadvertent omissions of
intended actions by skilled pilots. The studies reported within the
book employed several distinct but complementary methods:
ethnographic observations, analysis of incident reports submitted
by pilots, and cognitive task analysis. They showed that concurrent
task management comprises a set of issues distinct from (though
related to) mental workload, an area that has been studied
extensively by human factors researchers for more than 30 years.
This book will be of direct relevance to aviation psychologists and
to those involved in aviation training and operations. It will also
interest individuals in any domain that involves concurrent task
demands, for example the work of emergency room medical teams.
Furthermore, the countermeasures presented in the final chapter to
reduce vulnerability to errors associated with concurrent task
demands can readily be adapted to work in diverse domains.
Despite growing concern with the effects of concurrent task demands
on human performance, and research demonstrating that these demands
are associated with vulnerability to error, so far there has been
only limited research into the nature and range of concurrent task
demands in real-world settings. This book presents a set of NASA
studies that characterize the nature of concurrent task demands
confronting airline flight crews in routine operations, as opposed
to emergency situations. The authors analyze these demands in light
of what is known about cognitive processes, particularly those of
attention and memory, with the focus upon inadvertent omissions of
intended actions by skilled pilots. The studies reported within the
book employed several distinct but complementary methods:
ethnographic observations, analysis of incident reports submitted
by pilots, and cognitive task analysis. They showed that concurrent
task management comprises a set of issues distinct from (though
related to) mental workload, an area that has been studied
extensively by human factors researchers for more than 30 years.
This book will be of direct relevance to aviation psychologists and
to those involved in aviation training and operations. It will also
interest individuals in any domain that involves concurrent task
demands, for example the work of emergency room medical teams.
Furthermore, the countermeasures presented in the final chapter to
reduce vulnerability to errors associated with concurrent task
demands can readily be adapted to work in diverse domains.
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