sleep deprivation and pilot performance
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

Sleep deprivation and pilot performance

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice Sleep deprivation and pilot performance

London - Arabstoday

Night-time departures, early morning arrivals, and adjusting to several time zones in a matter of days can rattle circadian rhythms, compromise attention and challenge vigilance. And yet, these are the very conditions many pilots face as they contend with a technically challenging job in which potentially hundreds of lives are at stake. In an article to be published in a forthcoming issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, John A Caldwell, a psychologist and senior scientist at Fatigue Science, a Honolulu business focusing on fatigue assessment, examines the problem of sleep deprived pilots by teasing out the complex interplay of inadequate sleep and circadian rhythms. He explains how airline industry solutions miss the point and then suggests other options. Caldwell points out that \"fatigue-related performance problems in aviation have been consistently underestimated and underappreciated, despite the fact that decades of research on pilots and other operational personnel has clearly established that fatigue from insufficient sleep significantly degrades basic cognitive performance, psychological mood, and fundamental piloting skills.\" Evidence abounds. In 2004, a corporate airlines flight crashed as it approached Kirksville Regional Airport; in 2008, Honolulu based pilots of Go! Airlines overshot their destination by more than thirty miles because they fell asleep during a trip that was only fifty minutes long. A Northwest Airlines Flight overflew its destination by 150 miles because pilots had dozed off at the controls. In 2009, fifty people were killed when a Continental Connection flight en route from Newark to Buffalo crashed into a house. Pilots failed to respond properly to a stall warning and the flight went out of control. After examining what went wrong, the NTSB concluded that, \"the pilots\' performance was likely impaired because of fatigue.\" Since 1990 the US National Transportation Safety Board has placed pilot fatigue on the Most Wanted List of safety related priorities. Why? Because as fatigue increases, \"accuracy and timing degrade, lower standards of performance are accepted, the ability to integrate information from individual flight instruments into a meaningful and overall pattern declines, and attention narrows. \" In one study, F-117 pilots were deprived of one night of sleep and then were tested on precision instruments. Not only did pilot errors on those instruments double after one night of sleep loss, pilots reported feeling depressed and confused. Clearly fatigue is fundamentally the result of insufficient sleep, but for pilots the important issue is the consequences of that sleep loss when they are sitting at the control panel. The author suggests that \"fatigue related risks increase substantially when (a) the waking period is longer than 16 hours, (b) the preduty sleep period is shorter than 6 hours, or (c) the work period occurs during the pilot\'s usual sleep hours.\" \"Regulators, and often the pilots themselves, have tried to address the fatigue problem by focusing on duty hours rather than focusing on the physiological factors that are truly responsible,\" Caldwell says. \"The combination of insufficient sleep and circadian factors is at the heart of the fatigue problem in any operational context.\" The two most important variables for alertness are recent sleep and the body\'s natural circadian rhythm, or \"body clock.\" What that means is that when a pilot reports for duty, he or she should have had from seven to nine hours of good sleep within a reasonable period of time before work and that as often as possible, the work schedule is in some harmony with the pilot\'s natural daily rhythm. The amount of time that a pilot is actually working is much less important. But that is the area airlines and regulators have focused on to address the problem. \"Hours-of- service\" regulations have been instituted to mitigate fatigue, but \"that seems to be a function of convenience rather than science.\" Caldwell writes that in traditional regulatory approaches \"one hour of daytime flight in one\'s home time zone after plenty of sleep is considered to generate the same amount of fatigue as an hour of nighttime flight\" that was preceded by a transcontinental transition and sleep outside of a normal sleep cycle. Fortunately, new Federal Aviation Administration regulations better account for the true physiological nature of fatigue, but additional fatigue-management strategies are needed. Caldwell acknowledges that the very nature of airline travel predisposes pilots to disrupted sleep schedules, but he points out several approaches that can both predict a truly impaired pilot and mitigate the consequences of a lack of sleep. There are some fatigue prediction models that can help determine the impact of work/rest schedules on aviator performance. Crew members should be educated on sleep hygiene so they can snag some restorative rest before duty or during layovers. Onboard cockpit napping should be authorized so that pilots will be able to compensate for a lack of sleep. And new wearable sleep-tracking technologies should be utilized to actually measure the pre-duty and layover sleep of flight crews so that they can better manage and optimize their own sleep. \"As a society, we must come to grips with the fact that the average adult needs 7-9 hours of sleep every single day,\" he says. \"And there is no amount of willpower, professionalism, training, or money that will prevent the performance losses associated with the failure to routinely acquire sufficient sleep.\"

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

sleep deprivation and pilot performance sleep deprivation and pilot performance

 



Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

sleep deprivation and pilot performance sleep deprivation and pilot performance

 



GMT 09:58 2016 Wednesday ,23 March

cartoon four

GMT 10:16 2016 Wednesday ,23 March

cartoon five

GMT 10:18 2016 Wednesday ,23 March

cartoon eight

GMT 10:05 2017 Monday ,28 August

Saudi medical preparations for Haj reviewed

GMT 21:55 2014 Wednesday ,10 December

Thousands in Lima march for the planet

GMT 08:03 2017 Monday ,23 October

The battle for diversity on the Mideast

GMT 21:52 2011 Sunday ,15 May

Henson wins Asian Tour title in Manila

GMT 11:06 2014 Wednesday ,24 September

Farrell, Vaughn to star in new 'True Detective' series

GMT 06:17 2014 Saturday ,01 November

Spain's Fernandez sizzles at Skate Canada

GMT 20:14 2012 Monday ,27 August

People in Isaac\'s path told to get out

GMT 16:17 2018 Thursday ,30 August

Five Saudi women pilots granted GACA licences

GMT 10:33 2018 Monday ,22 January

Kurds invited to join Syria peace congress in Sochi

GMT 08:12 2018 Thursday ,04 January

China box-office back to strong growth
 
 Emirates Voice Facebook,emirates voice facebook  Emirates Voice Twitter,emirates voice twitter Emirates Voice Rss,emirates voice rss  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©

emiratesvoieen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen
emiratesvoice emiratesvoice emiratesvoice
emiratesvoice
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice