SAFEMODE's approach for incorporating human factors into risk informed design

Ramirez Marengo, Clementina and Llobet Lopez, Marta and Navas de Maya, Beatriz and Giagloglou, Eva and Kilner, Andrew and Kurt, Rafet Emek and Turan, Osman and Pozzi, Simone (2021) SAFEMODE's approach for incorporating human factors into risk informed design. In: 31st European Safety and Reliability Conference (ESREL) 2021, 2021-09-19 - 2021-09-23.

[thumbnail of Ramirez-Marengo-etal-ESREL2021-SAFEMODEs-approach-for-incorporating-human-factors-into-risk]
Preview
Text. Filename: Ramirez_Marengo_etal_ESREL2021_SAFEMODEs_approach_for_incorporating_human_factors_into_risk.pdf
Accepted Author Manuscript

Download (972kB)| Preview

Abstract

Human operators play a key role in the safe and successful conduct of maritime and aviation transport operations. Human error is often reported as a contributor to maritime and aviation accidents. Therefore, the implementation of human-informed design considerations is essential to improve safety and operational performance in both sectors, especially in the maritime sector, where there is a lack of an established framework to systematically consider human factors at the design stage. Therefore, the SAFEMODE project brings together key experts from both aviation and maritime sectors to address this important gap. The SAFEMODE project aims to deliver a framework that includes human factors considerations and enables designers to make risk-informed decisions. The methodological approach of SAFEMODE builds upon four areas: the collection and analysis of accident data; the development of a toolkit for human performance assurance, the development of Human Factors-based risk models and the creation of a framework to support risk-informed design. The type of safety events considered in SAFEMODE for both domains includes collision and grounding for the maritime sector, and runway collision, taxiway collision and wake vortex during en-route flight phase for the aviation sector. This paper will provide an insight into the efforts conducted as part of the SAFEMODE project to assess the human contribution to risk and the benefits of applying these models to support risk-informed decisions in design and operations.