Pilots, Personality, and Performance: Human Behavior and Stress in the Skies

Pilots, Personality, and Performance: Human Behavior and Stress in the Skies

Pilots, Personality, and Performance: Human Behavior and Stress in the Skies

Pilots, Personality, and Performance: Human Behavior and Stress in the Skies

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Overview

In this timely work, Sheila Deitz and William Thoms have brought together a group of essays that explore some of the human factors that are becoming increasingly recognized as major causes of airplane mishaps and crashes. While much of the discussion on this topic necessarily focuses on pilots, other airline professionals—flight attendants, mechanics, air traffic controllers, and executives—are also subject to the psychological stress addressed in these studies. The contributors examine a selected range of topics that include such areas as working conditions, perception, risk assessment, and the necessity of making choices in an unforgiving environment.

The book presents twelve chapters written by professionals who have devoted considerable time to studying the people who work for commercial airlines, and who have weathered the change from being part of a regulated industry to dealing with life in a cutthroat competitive environment. Among the topics that these professionals and scholars examine are the ways in which an impaired pilot can be deprived of his or her license, and the psychological factors involved; the influence of high altitude on the body, and how some of the physiological risks can be avoided; factors in qualifying pilots for medical certificates; communication and psychological issues facing student pilots; airline deregulation in the U.S. and Canada, and its effect on employees; age discrimination and the effectiveness of older pilots; hijacking; and the drafting of civilian pilots into war efforts. This important collection of essays will be a useful resource for students and professionals in the field of air transportation, as well as for both public and academic libraries.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780899305776
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/30/1991
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)
Lexile: 1380L (what's this?)

About the Author

SHEILA R. DEITZ is a psychologist with a long-term interest in aviation. She currently practices clinical and forensic psychology in Denver, where she is a professor at the School of Professional Psychology, University of Denver.

WILLIAM E. THOMS is a transportation lawyer who holds the rank of Professor of Law at the University of North Dakota. Currently he is a visiting professor at the University of Denver College of Law. He has co-authored two previous books for Quorum: Law and Economic Regulation in Transportation and Airline Labor Law.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
The Impaired Pilot by Sheila R. Deitz and Ward K. Johnson III
Flight: The Physiological Stresses by Karon S. Aronson
The Role of the Aviation Medical Examiner by Jon R. Rice
Cockpit Communication and Initial Aviation Training by H. Duane Luessenheide
Is Peter Pan Flying Your Plane? by Gail D. Roen
Deregulation and Pilot Stress by William E. Thoms
The Post-Deregulation Pilot Job Market: Pilot Error or Personnel Economics? by William A. Good
Managing Airline Corporate Stress by H. Robert Wasiuta
Commercial Pilots and Mandatory Retirement by John Delane Williams and Jole A. Williams
The Pilot and the Thinking Machine by Roderic A. Beaulieu
Pilots and Pirates: Airline Pilots and Hijacking by O. Peter St. John
Appendix: Civilian Pilots Go to War: The Civil Reserve Air Fleet Today, by Lt. Col. Richard D. Crabtree, USAF (Ret.)
Epilogue
Selected Bibliography
Index

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