Human factor analysis of cockpit work incidents in high-speed workboats: the mystery hidden between the lines

This study unpacked what investigators look at and how they construct causes in high-speed workboats.

It employed a Safety-II / HOP / HF perspective.

Tl;dr: human factors are poorly evaluated and largely seen as individual-level factors.

Some extracts:

·        “Although the analysis focused on negative observations, it also identified HFs that supported the activity”

·        “Many pivotal HFs [Human Factors] that affected operations were not evaluated, which meant that the documents had to be interpreted by reading ‘between the lines’”

·        “HFs were understood through individuals, as is often the case in the maritime sector”

·        “individuals’ successes and failures were generally seen as contributing to incidents, which shifted responsibility from the management to the front line”

·        “Problems crosschecking data sources by crew members were emphasized. Group-level HFs, such as crew communication, are challenging to analyse and were scarcely addressed, even though they were prerequisites for safety and efficiency in these .. complex operational environments”

·        “The successes related to teamwork that were mentioned were often related to fulfilling formal requirements, which is in line with the Safety I paradigm”

·        “Multitasking and time pressure were seen as harming operations, but mental workload was not explicitly addressed”

·        “HFs related to the technical and information environment were rarely mentioned, despite the role they play in crew performance”

·        The Finnish safety investigation authority “more accurately identified organizational HFs, such as crew structuring and work experience, as being behind the operational levels” whereas maritime organisations “seldom mentioned organizational HFs”

·        “Many of the HFs identified were related to the human consequences of actions, as situational awareness, e.g., can be both a factor and an effect”

·        “The organizations’ recommendations often focused on improving individuals’ performance by developing their professional skills or mastery of their work and following instructions and procedures, reflecting the norm-based emphasis”

·        “Many of the recommendations were related to developing and adopting working methods”

·        “Systemic mastery of HFs must be promoted in HSWs maritime [29,41], instead of focusing on the activities of individual crew members”

·        “The results showed that individualistic thinking is harmful, and that the operating culture is unlikely to be considered fair”

·        of operations, and investigations need to consider them carefully. The current paradigm shift in safety research (Safety I–II)

·        “the current paradigm shift in safety research (Safety I–II) offers an opportunity for change, and to effectively combine the aspects of safety thinking”

Ref: Lehtimäki, M., & Teperi, A. M. (2025). International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics, 1-13.

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Study link: https://doi.org/10.1080/10803548.2024.2445979

LinkedIn post: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/benhutchinson2_this-study-unpacked-how-investigators-conceptualise-activity-7298806604156583937-VFlE?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAeWwekBvsvDLB8o-zfeeLOQ66VbGXbOpJU

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