Journal Article10.1016/J.JSR.2006.04.007
Safety in shipping: the human element.
TL;DR: It is concluded that monitoring and modifying the human factors issues presented in this paper could contribute to maritime safety performance.
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About: This article is published in Journal of Safety Research. The article was published on 01 Jan 2006. The article focuses on the topics: Safety culture & Human error.
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Citations
The human talent and its role in ISM Code effectiveness and competitiveness in the shipping industry
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors empirically evaluate the role of human talent in the effective implementation of quality management systems in the shipping industry context and analyze the relationship between human talent and quality management.
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Managing unruly technologies in the engine control room: from problem patching to an architectural thinking and standardization
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors re-examined a design case in an ECR on a merchant ship and discussed the potential of a service-oriented architectural approach to manage emerging unruly technologies and integrate distributed resources in the maritime human-technology system.
The Malaysian Seafarers Psychological Distraction Assessment Using a TOPSIS Method
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the possible root causes for distractions and the affected areas for three groups of Malaysian seafarers, i.e., Senior Deck Cadets, Senior Deck Officers and Junior Deck Officers.
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What Is Fatigue and How Does It Affect the Safety Performance of Human Transport Operators? Fatigue in Transport Report I
Ross Owen Phillips
- 01 Nov 2014
TL;DR: The ability to manage human fatigue in transport operations would be improved by a shared understanding of what fatigue is, how it should be measured, and how it affects safety performance as mentioned in this paper.
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Pilot competencies as components of a dynamic human‐machine system
TL;DR: A theoretical model of flight deck team performance as a dynamic human-machine system, later referred to as CRM-DYMO (Crew Resources Management-Dynamic MOdel), which concentrates only on CRM competencies as defined by the International Civil Aviation Authority and the International Air Transport Association.
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An Introduction to the Bootstrap.
Bradley Efron,Robert Tibshirani +1 more
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Safety climate in industrial organizations: theoretical and applied implications.
TL;DR: It was shown that there is an agreement among employees' perceptions regarding safety climate in their company and that the level of this climate is correlated with safety program effectiveness as judged by safety inspectors.
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