Developing Proactive Methods for General Aviation Data Collection

Introduction: Over the last 20 years, nearly 40,000 general aviation (GA) aircraft were involved in accidents, roughly 20% of which were fatal. To address this safety concern, scientists have often relied on accident data. Because of the rare nature of accidents, commercial aviation incident and near miss data may prove to be useful sources of safety information. In one such study, the National Transportation Safety Board interviewed GA pilots that were flying near a weather-related accident in pursuit of a different perspective than that of the accident pilot. Interviewing GA pilots about their own weather-related event may provide similar benefits. Method: To understand factors leading GA pilots to encounter adverse weather conditions, pilots involved in an adverse weather encounter were interviewed using a one-hour structured interview. The interview was developed using surveys utilized by National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). In total, 27 pilots who experienced an adverse weather encounter were interviewed, of which 25 were included in the final analysis. Results: Previous studies conducted by the FAA and others found many GA accidents involving flight into adverse weather were categorized as a willful disregard for the rules and regulations of safety; violations as defined by the Human Factors Analysis and Classification System. Contrary to what the accident record seems to suggest, flight into adverse weather may also be influenced by the lack of appreciation/understanding of the hazards associated with adverse weather. Perhaps some encounters with adverse weather were motivated by outside influences or exacerbated by some manner of mechanical failure that may have led to the willful acceptance of unnecessary hazards. Conclusions: These data suggest that current beliefs surrounding flight into adverse weather by GA pilots may be incomplete. The data presented here suggest that additional effort should be placed in training, both ab initio and recurrent. Emphasis should be placed on ensuring a full understanding of the adverse impact of weather, including the recognition of instrument meteorological conditions, icing, convective events, etc. Likewise, with the proliferation of commercial weather products and on-board weather equipment, it may be time to move toward some form of standard weather package that all pilots would review before flying.

[1]  Albert Boquet,et al.  Human Error and General Aviation Accidents: A Comprehensive, Fine-Grained Analysis Using HFACS , 2005 .

[2]  Dennis B. Beringer,et al.  Priorities of Weather Information in Various Phases of Flight , 2002 .

[3]  Carl Macrae,et al.  Making risks visible: Identifying and interpreting threats to airline flight safety , 2009 .

[4]  Lynne Martin,et al.  Symposium Presentation Plan Continuation Errors: A Factor in Aviation Accidents? , 2000 .

[5]  William R. Knecht Use of Weather Information by General Aviation Pilots. Part 1. Quantitative: Reported Use and Value of Providers and Products , 2008 .

[6]  J. Shaoul Human Error , 1973, Nature.

[7]  David O'Hare,et al.  Cross-country VFR crashes: pilot and contextual factors. , 2002, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[8]  Juliana Goh,et al.  Human factors analysis of accidents involving visual flight rules flight into adverse weather. , 2002, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[9]  C. Stevens,et al.  Expert, intermediate and novice performance during simulated pre‐flight decision‐making , 2002 .

[10]  William R. Knecht Pilot Willingness to Take Off into Marginal Weather, Part II: Antecedent Overfitting with Forward Stepwise Logistic Regressions , 2005 .

[11]  David O'Hare,et al.  The Role of Situation Assessment and Flight Experience in Pilots' Decisions to Continue Visual Flight Rules Flight into Adverse Weather , 2002, Hum. Factors.

[12]  David O'Hare,et al.  Expert and Novice Pilot Perceptions of Static In-Flight Images of Weather , 2003 .

[13]  韓國航空大學 航空 械工學科 美聯邦航空廳(Federal Aviation Administration)의 航空機 製作檢査 制度의 現況 , 1979 .

[14]  Scott A. Shappell,et al.  Developing a Methodology for Assessing Safety Programs Targeting Human Error in Aviation , 2007 .

[15]  William R Knecht,et al.  Use of Weather Information by General Aviation Pilots, Part II, Qualitative: Exploring Factors Involved in Weather- Related Decision Making , 2008 .

[16]  J. M. Patterson,et al.  Operator error and system deficiencies: analysis of 508 mining incidents and accidents from Queensland, Australia using HFACS. , 2010, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[17]  Scott A. Shappell,et al.  A HUMAN ERROR APPROACH TO AVIATION ACCIDENT ANALYSIS , 2003 .

[18]  Dennis B. Beringer,et al.  Automation in General Aviation: Two Studies of Pilot Responses to Autopilot Malfunctions , 1999 .