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Aviation Learning Center Document An Overview of Human Factors in Aviation Maintenance
Author: Alan Hobbs Ph.D. Date: December 2008
ATSB TRANSPORT SAFETY REPORT AR-2008-055
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Without the intervention of maintenance personnel, equipment used in complex technological systems such as aviation, rail and marine transport, and medicine would drift towards a level of unreliability that would rapidly threaten efficiency and safety. Despite the essential contribution of maintenance to system reliability, maintenance is also a major cause of system failure. The rate of power station outages increases shortly after maintenance, maintenance quality is a major concern in the chemical industry, and in aviation there is evidence that maintenance is contributing to an increasing proportion of accidents.1 As automated systems become increasingly common, humans are performing less direct manual control of equipment and systems. As a result, maintenance is becoming a major remaining point of direct interaction between people and technology, where human capabilities and limitations can have a significant impact on system safety and reliability. Understanding the human factors in maintenance is more necessary than ever if we are to improve safety and reliability in aviation.

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