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Journal Article

Citation

Bowles S, Ursin H, Picano J. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 2000; 71(11): 1093-1097.

Affiliation

NASA-Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA. bowless@jackson.army.mil

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11086661

Abstract

This study was conducted at NASA Ames Research Center as a part of a larger research project assessing the impact of captain's personality on crew performance and perceived stress in 24 air transport crews (5). Three different personality types for captains were classified based on a previous cluster analysis (3). Crews were comprised of three crewmembers: captain, first officer, and second officer/flight engineer. A total of 72 pilots completed a 1.5-d full-mission simulation of airline operations including emergency situations in the Ames Manned Vehicle System Research Facility B-727 simulator. Crewmembers were tested for perceived stress on four dimensions of the NASA Task Load Index after each of five flight legs. Crews were divided into three groups based on rankings from combined error and rating scores. High performance crews (who committed the least errors in flight) reported experiencing less stress in simulated flight than either low or medium crews. When comparing crew positions for perceived stress over all the simulated flights no significant differences were found. However, the crews led by the"Right Stuff"(e.g., active, warm, confident, competitive, and preferring excellence and challenges) personality type captains typically reported less stress than crewmembers led by other personality types.


Language: en

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