Development of ASHRAM: A New Human-Reliability-Analysis Method for Aviation Safety.
The primary purpose of the Aviation Safety Human Reliability Analysis Method, (ASHRAM) is to predict plausible aviation-accident scenarios before they occur. An underlying premise of ASHRAM, is that many significant human errors can occur as a result of a combination of situational factors, or error-forcing context that can trigger cognitive error mechanisms in personnel, which can lead to the execution of unsafe acts. The method allows aviation researchers to analyze accidents and incidents retrospectively, by answering questions and filling in forms, or prospectively, by systematically generating families of plausible scenarios based on a small set of initiators. ASHRAM is packaged in a brief, readable format, with step-by-step instructions, and with real-world examples so that it can be utilized by a variety of researchers, modelers, analysts, trainers, and pilots with a variety of backgrounds. This paper summarizes parts, but not all of the ASHRAM project technical report, DE2001-773843. First, the cognitive model will be described, followed by a summary of the procedures to perform retrospective and prospective analyses. Conclusions will address unique benefits to be derived from ASHRAM usage and appraises potential future directions for the technique.
- Record URL:
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Corporate Authors:
Sandia National Laboratories
P.O. Box 5800
Albuquerque, NM United States 87185Department of Energy
1000 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC United States 20585 -
Authors:
- Miller, D P
- Publication Date: 2004
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Print
- Features: Figures; References;
- Pagination: 7p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Aircraft pilotage; Aviation safety; Errors; Flight crews; Human factors engineering; Human machine systems; Landing; Reliability
- Subject Areas: Aviation; Safety and Human Factors; I83: Accidents and the Human Factor;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01138241
- Record Type: Publication
- Contract Numbers: DE-AC04-94AL85000
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Aug 12 2009 12:46PM