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Title: The Effects of Commuting on Pilot Fatigue
Accession Number: 01354608
Record Type: Monograph
Record URL: Availability: National Academies Press 500 Fifth Street, NW Abstract: Nearly everyone experiences fatigue, but some professions--such as aviation, medicine and the military--demand alert, precise, rapid, and well-informed decision making and communication with little margin for error. The potential for fatigue to negatively affect human performance is well established. Concern about this potential in the aviation context extends back decades, with both airlines and pilots agreeing that fatigue is a safety concern. A more recent consideration is whether and how pilot commuting, conducted in a pilot's off-duty time, may affect fatigue during flight duty. In summer 2010 the U.S. Congress directed the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to update the federal regulations that govern pilot flight and duty time, taking into account recent research related to sleep and fatigue. As part of their directive, Congress also instructed FAA to have the National Academy of Sciences conduct a study on the effects of commuting on pilot fatigue. This report reviews research and other information related to the prevalence and characteristics of commuting; to the science of sleep, fatigue, and circadian rhythms; to airline and regulatory oversight policies; and to pilot and airline practices. The report discusses the policy, economic, and regulatory issues that affect pilot commuting, and outlines potential next steps, including recommendations for regulatory or administrative actions, or further research by the FAA.
Language: English
Corporate Authors: National Research Council Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Pagination: 220p
Publication Date: 2011
Media Type: Web
Features: Appendices
(7)
; Bibliography; Glossary; References
TRT Terms: Subject Areas: Aviation; Safety and Human Factors; I83: Accidents and the Human Factor
Files: TRIS
Created Date: Oct 5 2011 10:42AM
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