Breaking the Mishap Chain: Human Factors Lessons Learned from Aerospace Accidents and Incidents in Research, Flight Test, and Development
Peter W. Merlin and Gregg A. Bendrick and Dwight A. Holland

643903main_BreakingMishapChain-ebook.pdf22.63MB
Type: Paper
Tags: paper

Bibtex:
@article{,
title = {Breaking the Mishap Chain: Human Factors Lessons Learned from Aerospace Accidents and Incidents in Research, Flight Test, and Development},
journal = {},
author = {Peter W. Merlin and Gregg A. Bendrick and Dwight A. Holland},
year = {},
url = {},
abstract = {This volume contains a collection of case studies of mishaps involving experimental aircraft, aerospace vehicles, and spacecraft in which human factors played a significant role. In all cases the engineers involved, the leaders and managers, and the operators (i.e., pilots and astronauts) were supremely qualified and by all accounts superior performers. Such accidents and incidents rarely resulted from a single cause but were the outcome of a chain of events in which altering at least one element might have prevented disaster. As such, this work is most certainly not an anthology of blame. It is offered as a learning tool so that future organizations, programs, and projects may not be destined to repeat the mistakes of the past. These lessons were learned at high material and personal costs and should not be lost to the pages of history.}
}

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