Human Factors in Aviation

 Human Factors in Aviation

Human factors are those that occur with humans that happen in everyone's daily lives not necessarily concerning aviation at all. For example, distractions, fatigue, stress, etc (Shorrock,2017).

    During Aircraft servicing on an EA-18G aircraft, part of servicing the aircraft is to refuel it. During this evolution of refueling this aircraft, miscommunication can play a huge role in this aircraft not being able to perform its mission, and also the strong possibility of defueling causing rework (FAA,2016). The communication part of human factors is huge as maintenance control is communicating with the ground crew on how much fuel needs to be given to the aircraft, and if it should be fueled internally or externally (FAA,2016). Communication plays a huge role in aviation human factors, but so does the lack of resources and personnel which can cause more stress and more issues during aircraft servicing Lack of communication, lack of resources, pressure from maintenance control, and complacency are all human factors that can cause an aircraft mishap doing something as simple as refueling an aircraft (FAA,2016). To prevent such mishaps human factors training, lack of complacency and great communication can all provide ways to reduce human factors as much as possible preventing human error and aviation mishaps (FAA,2016).



Stevenshorrock, V. A. P. B. (2019, March 27). Four Kinds of ‘Human Factors’: 2. Factors of Humans. Humanistic Systems. https://humanisticsystems.com/2017/08/12/four-kinds-of-human-factors-2-factors-of-humans/

FAA. (2020, August 10). Secondary navigation. Retrieved from https://www.faa.gov/aircraft/air_cert/design_approvals/human_factors/



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